Surgery Flashcards
Congenital neck lump
branchial cleft anomalies (typeI/II/III): unilateral tissue anterior to SCM trapped in developing neck
thyroglossal duct cyst: midline mucous/purulent cyst from thyroid migration from base of tongue to neck
lymphatic malformation: masses composed of small lymph channels subcutaneously in head/neck and benign but may become infected
lymphangioma/cystic hygromas: abnormal collection of lymph channels in neck posterior to SCM, oral cavity, face or airway
dermoid: subcutaneous nodules along embryonic fusion lines (midline neck) with risk of infection
Visual testing
Thyroglossal duct cyst
incidence: most common congenital cyst in neck
pathophysiology: arises thyroglossal tract descending from foramen caecum to thyroid isthmus which is lined by respiratory epithelium
- may tether to hyoid bone 75%, submental 15%, suprasternal 8%
clinical:
- tender midline lump post RTI
- moves with swallowing
- may become infected
diagnosis: US, CT
management: avoid surgery during infective phase and treat AB, surgical excision post
Cholesteatoma
incidence: 1:100,000, M>F, 5 years
pathogenesis: abnormal growth of squamous epithelium in middle earl
cause: congenital or acquired
clinical:
- recurrent infections, otorrhoea, ear pain, hearing impairment, vertigo, headache, FN palsy
risk factors: OM, T21, TS, abnormal anatomy
diagnosis:
- white mass behind intact TM with deep retraction
- focal granulation on surface of TM in periphery
- otorrhoea >2 weeks
treatment: surgery