Intro & Anatomy - Neck Node Know-How
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Cervical Lymphadenopathy: Enlargement of neck lymph nodes.
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Node Assessment:
- Normal: < 1 cm (Jugulodigastric up to 1.5 cm), mobile, soft.
- Abnormal: > 1 cm, firm, matted, fixed; suggests pathology.
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Neck Node Levels (Robbins):
- I: Submental (IA), Submandibular (IB)
- II: Upper Jugular (IIA/IIB by SAN)
- III: Middle Jugular
- IV: Lower Jugular
- V: Posterior Triangle (VA/VB)
- VI: Anterior Compartment (central nodes)
- (VII): Superior Mediastinal
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📌 Mnemonic (I-VI): Smart University Medicos Love Practical Anatomy. (S-Submental/mandibular, U-Upper, M-Middle, L-Lower Jugular, P-Posterior, A-Anterior).
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⭐ Level IV (Supraclavicular) Nodes: Left-sided (Virchow's node) may indicate gastric, thoracic, or pelvic malignancy.
Etiology - The Culprit Countdown
- Infectious:
- Bacterial: S. aureus, S. pyogenes (acute, tender); TB (scrofula: chronic, matted); B. henselae (cat scratch).
- Viral: EBV (mono: posterior triangle, fever, pharyngitis); CMV; HIV; Adenovirus.
- Parasitic: Toxoplasmosis (posterior cervical).
- Inflammatory (Non-infectious):
- Kawasaki Disease (children <5 yrs, fever >5 days, mucocutaneous signs, coronary risk).
- Sarcoidosis (bilateral, firm, non-tender, non-caseating granulomas).
- Kikuchi-Fujimoto Disease (young adults, fever, self-limiting).
- Neoplastic:
- Primary: Lymphoma (Hodgkin's, NHL), Leukemia.
- Metastatic: SCC (H&N primary: hard, fixed); Thyroid Ca; Nasopharyngeal Ca (NPC - Level V).
- 📌 VIRCHOW (GI Malignancy): Left supraclavicular node (Troisier's sign).
⭐ Virchow's node (left supraclavicular) strongly suggests metastatic gastric cancer (Troisier's sign), but also other abdominal/thoracic malignancies.
Clinical Evaluation - Detective Work
- History:
- Duration: Acute (<2 wks), Chronic (>6 wks).
- Symptoms: Pain, fever, B-symptoms (weight loss, night sweats) ⚠️.
- Exposures: TB, smoking, HIV risks. Prior malignancy.
- Examination (📌 L S C T M):
- Location: Level; supraclavicular (Virchow's) ⚠️.
- Size: >1.5 cm abnormal; >2 cm red flag.
- Consistency: Rubbery (lymphoma), hard (mets), fluctuant (abscess).
- Tenderness: Inflammatory.
- Mobility: Fixed/matted (TB, malignancy).
- Check primary sites (ENT, scalp, chest).
⭐ Lymphomatous nodes: Typically non-tender, firm, rubbery; may be matted.
- Red Flags (prompt urgent workup):
- Age >40
- Duration >4-6 wks
- Size >2 cm
- Hard/fixed consistency
- Supraclavicular location
- B-symptoms (fever, night sweats, weight loss)
- History of cancer
Investigations - Unmasking the Mass
- Initial Approach:
- Ultrasound (USG) Neck:
- Characterizes node: size, shape, hilum (absent/present), echotexture, vascularity.
- Guides FNAC.
- Malignant signs: Round, hypoechoic, absent hilum, calcification, necrosis, peripheral vascularity.
- Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology (FNAC):
⭐ FNAC is the initial diagnostic test of choice for most palpable cervical lymph nodes.
- High sensitivity & specificity.
- Ultrasound (USG) Neck:
- If FNAC Inconclusive/Suspicious:
- Repeat FNAC.
- Core Needle Biopsy (esp. lymphoma).
- Excision Biopsy: Gold standard; for definitive diagnosis or lymphoma subtyping.
- Staging & Primary Search (if malignancy confirmed/suspected):
- Contrast-Enhanced CT (CECT) Neck ± Chest.
- MRI: Superior soft tissue detail.
- PET-CT: Unknown primary, staging, recurrence.
- Panendoscopy (Direct Laryngoscopy, Esophagoscopy, Bronchoscopy): For suspected SCC.
- Blood Tests: CBC, ESR, LDH; specific markers (e.g., viral serology, tumor markers if indicated).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Persistent cervical lymphadenopathy (>2 weeks) mandates further investigation.
- Supraclavicular nodes, especially left (Virchow's), strongly indicate underlying malignancy (often GI).
- Posterior triangle nodes are frequently associated with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) or lymphoma.
- FNAC is the initial investigation of choice for most palpable cervical nodes.
- Tuberculosis (scrofula) is a key differential in India, presenting as matted nodes, possibly with a cold abscess.
- Metastatic Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SCC) is the most common malignant cause in adults.
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