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Neck Masses Evaluation

Neck Masses Evaluation

Neck Masses Evaluation

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Neck Mass Map - Region & Reason

Anatomical triangles of the neck diagram

  • Midline Structures:
    • Thyroglossal duct cyst: congenital, moves with tongue protrusion/swallowing.
    • Thyroid: goiter, nodule, carcinoma; often requires USG/FNAC.
    • Dermoid cyst: congenital, doughy consistency, may contain adnexal structures.
    • Submental lymphadenopathy: often due to dental/oral infections.
  • Anterior Triangle:
    • Submandibular: Salivary gland (sialadenitis, tumor), regional lymph nodes.
    • Carotid region: 2nd Branchial cleft cyst (anterior to SCM), carotid body tumor (pulsatile), cervical lymphadenopathy.
  • Posterior Triangle:
    • Lymphadenopathy: commonest; metastatic (SCC), lymphoma, TB (scrofula).
    • Cystic hygroma (lymphangioma): congenital, soft, transilluminates.
    • Lipoma, neurogenic tumors (schwannoma, neurofibroma).
  • Supraclavicular Fossa:
    • Lymphadenopathy: high suspicion of malignancy (e.g., lung, GI).
    • Cystic hygroma, lipoma.

⭐ Virchow's node (left supraclavicular) strongly suggests metastatic gastric cancer; part of Troisier's sign.

The Patient Story - Clues & Feels

  • History:
    • Onset/Duration: Acute (inflam/infect) vs. Chronic (neoplasm/congenital).
    • Pain: Painful (inflam) vs. Painless (neoplasm/congenital).
    • Red Flags: Hoarseness, dysphagia, weight loss, night sweats.
    • Risk Factors: Smoking, alcohol, radiation, family Hx cancer.
    • Systemic: Fever (infection), thyroid symptoms.
  • Examination ("Feels"):
    • Location: Midline, lateral; specific triangles.
    • Consistency: Soft, cystic, firm, rubbery, hard (malignancy).
    • Mobility: Mobile (benign) vs. Fixed (malignancy).
    • Tenderness: Suggests inflammation.
    • Special Signs:
      • Swallowing movement: Thyroid, thyroglossal cyst.
      • Tongue protrusion movement: Thyroglossal cyst. 📌 (Sistrunk's sign)

⭐ A persistent, firm, enlarging neck mass in an adult, especially >40 years with smoking history, is highly suspicious for malignancy.

Investigation Arsenal - Scan & Sample

  • Initial Scan:
    • Ultrasound (USG): First-line. Differentiates cystic vs. solid. Guides FNA. Ultrasound of cystic neck mass near carotid bifurcation
  • Advanced Scans (Staging & Extent):
    • CECT Neck: Defines extent, lymph node status (size >1.5cm, necrosis, ECE).
    • MRI: Superior for soft tissue (e.g., parapharyngeal, perineural spread).
    • PET-CT: For unknown primary, staging.
  • Tissue Sampling:
    • FNAC (Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology): Gold standard initial diagnosis. USG-guided for ↑accuracy.

      ⭐ A negative FNAC in a clinically suspicious node (especially for lymphoma) warrants further investigation, often an excisional biopsy.

    • Core Needle Biopsy (CNB): For suspected lymphoma if FNAC non-diagnostic (provides architecture).
    • Excisional Biopsy: Definitive diagnosis if other methods fail (esp. lymphoma). Avoid incisional if malignancy suspected (seeding risk).
  • Thyroglossal Duct Cyst (TGDC)

    • Midline (or just off-midline), painless, moves with tongue protrusion & swallowing.
    • Embryological remnant.
    • Treatment: Sistrunk procedure (excision of cyst, duct, central hyoid).
  • Branchial Cleft Cyst

    • Smooth, non-tender, fluctuant mass on lateral neck, anterior to SCM.
    • Usually 2nd arch origin.
    • Can get infected. Algorithm for evaluating cystic neck masses in children
  • Lymphadenopathy (LAD)

    • Reactive: Tender, mobile (infection).
    • Malignant: Hard, fixed (metastasis, lymphoma).
    • Tuberculous (Scrofula): Matted nodes, posterior triangle; cold abscess. 📌 "King's evil".
  • Dermoid & Epidermoid Cysts

    • Midline, slow-growing, doughy. Contain keratin/skin adnexa.
  • Lipoma

    • Soft, lobulated, mobile, subcutaneous. "Slip sign" positive. Benign.
  • Carotid Body Tumor (Paraganglioma)

    • Pulsatile mass at carotid bifurcation.
    • Mobile side-to-side, not vertically (Fontaine's sign).
    • "Lyre sign" on angiography.

⭐ Thyroglossal duct cysts, the most common congenital midline neck mass, characteristically move upwards with tongue protrusion.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Persistent neck mass > 2 weeks warrants investigation, especially in adults.
  • FNAC is the primary diagnostic tool for most palpable neck masses.
  • Midline masses (children): often thyroglossal duct cysts (move with tongue); Lateral masses (children): branchial cleft cysts or lymphadenopathy.
  • Adults > 40: firm, fixed, painless lateral neck mass is metastatic SCC until proven otherwise.
  • Left supraclavicular mass (Virchow's node) strongly suggests infraclavicular malignancy (gastric, lung, lymphoma).

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