PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 5 November 2001, p. e94
Received Mar 16, 2001; accepted Jun 13, 2001.
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From the Divisions of * General Pediatrics,
Introduction. Upper airway
obstruction from a retropharyngeal mass requires urgent evaluation. In
children, the differential diagnosis includes infection, trauma,
neoplasm, and congenital abnormalities. Aberrant cervical thymic
tissue, although occasionally observed on autopsy examination, is
rarely clinically significant. We present the case of an infant with
respiratory distress attributed to aberrant thymic tissue located in
the retropharyngeal space.
Case. A 6-week-old infant was brought to the emergency
department for evaluation of stridor associated with periodic episodes
of cyanosis. Lateral neck radiograph revealed widening of the
retropharyngeal soft tissues. The patient's symptoms did not improve
with intravenous ampicillin-sulbactam. Magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) performed on the seventh day of hospitalization revealed
a retropharyngeal mass that extended to the carotid space. The mass was
easily resected using an intraoral approach. Microscopic examination
demonstrated thymic tissue. A normal thymus was also observed in the
anterior mediastinum on MRI. The patient recovered uneventfully and had no further episodes of stridor or cyanosis.
Discussion. Aberrant cervical thymic tissue may be cystic
or solid. Cystic cervical thymus is more common, and 6% of these
patients present with symptoms of dyspnea or dysphagia. Aberrant solid
cervical thymus usually presents as an asymptomatic anterior neck mass. This case is unusual in that solid thymic tissue was located in the
retropharynx, a finding not previously reported in the English literature. Additionally, the patient presented in acute respiratory distress, and the diagnosis was confounded by the presence of mild laryngomalacia. In retrospect, our patient likely had symptoms of
intermittent upper airway obstruction since birth. The acute respiratory distress at presentation was likely the result of laryngomalacia exacerbated by the presence of aberrant thymic tissue
and a superimposed viral infection. Aberrantly located thymic tissue arises as a consequence of migrational
defects during thymic embryogenesis. The thymus is a paired organ
derived from the third and, to a lesser extent, fourth pharyngeal
pouches. After its appearance during the sixth week of fetal life, it
descends to a final position in the anterior mediastinum, adjacent to
the parietal pericardium. Aberrant thymic tissue results when this
tissue breaks free from the thymus as it migrates caudally. Therefore,
aberrant thymic tissue may be found in any position along a line from
the angle of the mandible to the sternal notch, and in the anterior
mediastinum to the level of the diaphragm. In an autopsy study of 3236 children, abnormally positioned thymic tissue was found in 34 cases
(1%). The aberrant thymus was most often located near the thyroid
gland (n = 19 cases) but was also detected lower
in the anterior neck (n = 6 cases), higher in the anterior
neck (n = 8 cases), and at the left base of the skull
(n = 1 case). The presence of thymic tissue in the retropharyngeal space in our patient is more unusual given the typical
embryologic origin and descent of the thymus in the anterior neck to
the mediastinum.Children with aberrant thymus may have associated anomalies.
Twenty-four of 34 children (71%) with aberrant thymus detected at
autopsy had features consistent with DiGeorge syndrome, and only 5 of
the remaining 10 patients had a normal mediastinal thymus present. Our
patient had normal serum calcium levels after excision and a
mediastinal thymus was visualized on MRI. Biospy is required for diagnosis of cervical thymus and should also be
considered to exclude other causes. MRI is helpful in delineating the
presence, position, and extent of thymic tissue. Immunologic sequelae
or recurrence after resection of an aberrant cervical thymus has not
been reported.
Otorhinolaryngology, § Pathology, and
Radiology, Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.