Abstract

Between 1965 and 1982, we treated 46 patients with cystic lesions of the thymus. Thirty patients had anterior mediastinal cysts, nine had cysts which were large enough to be both cervical and mediastinal, and seven had cervical cysts. The majority (40/46) presented with asymptomatic masses. Six patients presented with distinct complaints: dysphagia (four patients), hoarseness owing to vocal cord paralysis (one patient), and cervical pain (one patient). All six had benign thymic cysts. The diagnosis of a cystic mass was established prior to operation by ultrasonography and computed axial tomography in our last three patients. These two techniques delineated the capsule and the central fluid in those three cases. All 46 patients had the mass resected without mortality or significant morbidity, except for resection of the phrenic nerve in one patient with malignant cystic thymoma. Cervical cysts were excised through cervical incisions. Cysts located in the anterior mediastinum and cervical-mediastinal cysts required median sternotomy or right thoracotomy for successful resection. Pathological examination showed that 39 patients had benign thymic cysts, three had benign cystic thymoma, two had malignant thymoma, one had a seminoma arising in the thymus, and one had a lymphoblastoma. We believe that a cystic thymic mass which can be detected by ultrasonography and computed tomography, although usually benign, does not eliminate the possibility of malignancy, and resection, therefore, is indicated.

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