Soft Tissue Cysts of the Neck COPY Flashcards

1
Q

Dermoid Cyst

Charcterstics

A
  • Benign developmental cystic lesion
  • Considered a form of teratoma

Remember: Teratomas have
all four embryologic layers and so you can see these cysts that have teeth, bone, hair, muscle, and nerves.

Dermoid cyst is sort of a lesser version of a teratoma in that it just has dermis, rather than all the other layers

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2
Q

Dermoid Cyst

Clinically

A
  • Depending on whether the cyst is above or below the mylohyoid muscle►the lesion will cause swelling into the oral cavity elevating the tongue or under the chin in the submandibular area, respectively
  • Usually found on the midline
  • Painless and slow growing, if not infected
  • Upon palpation, cyst feels doughy or rubbery
  • Usually roundish to oval-ish swelling
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3
Q

Dermoid Cyst

demographic and locations

A
  • Most common in the 1st and 2nd decade ( young pts)
  • Can be found anywhere, but in the oral cavity they are ususally located in the anterior floor of the mouth (FOM) - usually on the midline
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4
Q

Dermoid Cyst

Treatment

A
  • surgical excision
  • recurrence is rare
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5
Q
A

Dermoid Cyst

a dome shaped
swelling
in the floor of the
mouth.

If these were left long
enough, they could cause issues
with swallowing

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6
Q

What is this clinical finding?

A

Dermoid Cyst

✎This is a larger lesion on the floor of the mouth, causing
elevation of the tongue
✎If you let this go/grow, it would be similar to Ludwig’s angina where you would basically eventually obstruct the airway
The difference is this is very slow growing while Ludwig’s happens rather quickly. with fever and other symptoms.

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7
Q

What is this clinical finding?

A

Dermoid Cyst

  • This is showing you when they occur below the mylohyoid muscle.
  • You get an elevation under the chin.
  • This is a fairly small one but they can get much larger
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8
Q

Epidermoid Cyst

also known as

A

infundibular cyst

epidermal inclusion cyst

“sebaceous” cyst (laymen’s term, not really sebaceous) ~

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9
Q

Epidermoid Cyst

Charcterstics

A
  • A very common skin cyst
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10
Q

The epidermoid cyst is similar to which cyst?

A

similar to the dermoid cyst, except we don’t see those adnexal structures

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11
Q

Epidermoid Cyst

Etiology

A
  • Often occur after _inflammation of a hair follicl_e
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12
Q

Epidermoid Cyst

Demographics and Location

A

Males > Females

Young adults more likely to have cysts of the face

Older adults have cysts of the back

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13
Q

Epidermoid Cyst

Associated with which

syndrome?

A

Associated with Gardner’s syndrome

Gardner syndrome is associated with polyps
in the intestine
.

Gardner syndrome is associated with epidermoid cysts.

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14
Q

Epidermoid Cyst

Clinically

A

Subcutaneous nodular, firm to fluctuant, papule

~ It tends to be a subcutaneous, dome-shaped nodule that
can be either firm to fluctuant
, depending on how much stuff is within the lumen

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15
Q

What is the key difference between a dermoid and epidermoid cyst?

A
  • The key difference between a dermoid and
  • epidermoid cyst, is that there’s no adnexal structures in an epidermoid cyst. There are adnexal structures in a dermoid cyst.
  • The adnexal structures are: sebaceous glands, sweat glands, hair follicles, etc.
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16
Q

Epidermoid Cyst

Treatment

A

■ Treatment is excision

Recurrence is rare

17
Q

What is this clinical finding?

A

Epidermoid Cyst

A dome-shaped swelling.

There’s no change in the
overlying skin color, no redness, no pain

18
Q

Thyroglossal Duct Cyst

Etiology/Origin

A
  • A developmental cyst that develops from epithelial remnants of a tract which forms when the thyroid anlage descends into the neck from an area that later forms the foramen caecum
  • Follows a path that goes anterior to the hyoid bone and ends below the thyroid cartilage
19
Q

What is the most common

developmental cyst of the neck?

A

Thyroglossal Duct Cyst

20
Q

Thyroglossal Duct Cyst

Clinically

A

■ Cysts are typically painless fluctuant swellings, unless infected
If the cyst remains attached to the hyoid bone or the tongue ► i_t will move up and down when swallowing or protruding the tongue_
~ 1/3 will present with a fistulous tract ~ so they’ll be draining.

21
Q

Thyroglossal Duct Cyst

Treatment

A

surgical excision

recurrence are not uncommon

Rare cases of thyroid carcinoma developing in these cysts have been reported

22
Q

Thyroglossal Duct Cyst

Demographics and locations

A

60-80% of cysts are below the hyoid bone

Most commonly present in the first 2 decades (~ 50% prior to 20 years of age)

■ Cyst classically forms at the midline

The most common developmental cyst of the neck

23
Q

What is this clinical finding?

A

Thyroglossal Duct Cyst

This is NOT a goiter.

It looks like an enlargement of the thyroid, but this ended up being just
a cyst, so they had a thyroglossal duct cyst

24
Q

Branchial Cleft Cyst

Also known as

A

cervical lymphoepithelial cysts

25
Q

Branchial Cleft Cyst

Demographic and location

A

■ Most commonly presents in the 3rd to 5th decades

■Located on the lateral aspect of the neck, usually anterior to the sternocleidomastoid muscle

2/3 of the reported lesions have been on the left side

■Although cyst are uncommon in the parotid gland, can see multiple lymphoepithelial cysts bilaterally in HIV positive patients

■These cases present as painless uni- or bilateral swellings of the parotid glands

26
Q

Branchial Cleft Cyst

Clinically

A
  • presents as a soft fluctuant swelling ranging from 1 to 10 cm in diameter
27
Q

Branchial Cleft Cyst

Etiology

A

Etiology is disputed

  • Some think it is from remnants of the branchial cleft
  • Others think it is cystic change of parotid gland epithelium which became entrapped in a cervical lymph node during development
28
Q

Branchial Cleft Cyst

&

HPV patients

A

We can see multiple Branchial Ceft cysts bilaterally on the parotid gland

Painless swelling bilaterally or unilaterally on the parotid gland

29
Q

Branchial Cleft Cyst

Treatment

A

surgical excision, recurrence is rare

30
Q

What is this clinical finding?

A

Branchial Cleft Cyst

a small one in a child.

You can see that
there’s a small cystic lesion here on the neck

31
Q

What is this clinical finding?

A

Branchial Cleft Cyst

Then you can see it in an older person; this is getting
to be maybe 4-5 centimeters at least in size. He left
his for a little bit longer

32
Q

Oral Lymphoepithelial Cyst

Demographics and Location

A

Uncommon lesion

The Most frequent location is the floor of the mouth (FOM) (> 50%)

33
Q

Oral Lymphoepithelial Cyst

Clinically

A

■ Usually less than 1 cm in diameter
■ May feel firm or soft on palpation
■ Typically creamy to yellow in color
Painless unless infected

34
Q

Oral Lymphoepithelial Cyst

Treatment

A
  • Surgical Excision
  • Reccurance is Rare
35
Q

What is this clinical finding?

A

Oral Lymphoepithelial Cyst

A pale dome-shape swelling in the floor of the mouth. ​because the lesion is so close to the surface; you’re seeing little capillaries of the mucosa lining the lesion