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1/55. Management of incidentally discovered cervical paragangliomas: report of two cases and review of current issues.

    Paragangliomas of the head and neck are uncommon neoplasms arising from the extra-adrenal paraganglia and include carotid body and glomus vagale tumors. These lesions may be discovered incidentally by imaging studies performed to evaluate carotid atherosclerotic occlusive disease. Incidental paragangliomas of the head and neck may be smaller than those discovered due to symptoms. Although surgical resection remains the definitive treatment for head and neck paragangliomas, important issues of management arise when such lesions are discovered. Two recent cases are reported. epidemiology, pathophysiology, diagnostic evaluation, and issues of management of head and neck paragangliomas are discussed.
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keywords = carotid
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2/55. paraganglioma of the thyroid: two cases that clarify and expand the clinical spectrum.

    BACKGROUND: Paragangliomas (PGs) can, on rare occasions, arise within the thyroid parenchyma presumably from displaced laryngeal paraganglia. On the basis of a limited number of reported cases, thyroid PGs invariably affect women, they are always benign, and they are usually mistaken for some other more common thyroid lesion. methods: We describe the histopathologic features, immunohistochemical findings, and clinical characteristics of two thyroid PGs. RESULTS: One tumor was incidentally discovered in a 55-year-old man during evaluation of a carotid bruit. The other tumor aggressively invaded the trachea and esophagus of a 52-year-old woman with a presumed long-standing nodular goiter. In both cases, the initial pathologic evaluation suggested medullary thyroid carcinoma. Both patients are alive without recurrent disease after surgical resection. CONCLUSIONS: These cases emphasize the need to consider PG in the differential diagnosis of neuroendocrine thyroid tumors, even in those tumors involving men or behaving in a locally aggressive fashion. Failure to do so carries grave implications regarding patient prognosis and management.
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keywords = carotid
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3/55. Surgical resection of jugulare foramen tumors by juxtacondylar approach without facial nerve transposition.

    PRESENTATION: Jugulare foramen tumors (JFT) remain a difficult challenge especially in the forms extending extradurally and invading the petrous bone. In the standard technique, facial nerve function is placed at risks because of its transposition. We report on 31 extradural (N = 11) or intra-extra dural (N = 20) JFT resected surgically using the juxtacondylar approach alone or in combination with the infratemporal approach and without facial nerve transposition. RESULTS: The juxtacondylar approach permits the opening of the JF on its posteroinferior aspect and thus reduces the extent of petrous bone drilling. In tumors strictly located in the JF (N = 11), no petrous bone drilling is necessary and the facial nerve is never exposed. In tumors extending into the petrous bone (N = 20), the facial nerve was never transposed and moreover was kept in its bony canal in 15 cases. In only 5 cases, was the fallopian canal opened as the tumor was invading its bony wall. Similarly hearing function, when pre-operatively intact was always preserved and a better preservation of the lower cranial nerves could be achieved. Whatever the tumoral extent along the petrosal carotid artery, a radical resection could be realized in 30 cases. CONCLUSION: Therefore, we consider the juxtacondylar approach a useful adjunct to increase the possibilities of resection of JFT; it allows a better preservation of the neurovascular structures, especially the facial nerve which is kept in place and moreover kept in its bony canal when it is not invaded by the tumor.
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ranking = 0.59894034197804
keywords = carotid, carotid artery, artery
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4/55. Malignant carotid body tumors: report of three cases.

    The aim of the current report was to describe 3 cases of malignant carotid body tumor (CBT) and to review the literature. My clinical records of 87 CBTs in 81 patients (6 bilateral) were reviewed, 79 of which were operated on. Three malignant cases were found. The first was in a 40-year-old man who presented with pulmonary metastases 6 years after resection of a CBT. He was treated with chemotherapy and interferon, but died with disseminated disease 2 years later. The second case was in a 56-year-old woman who had a 5-cm, fixed, hard mass in the upper aspect of the neck and a paralysis of the left vocal cord. This lesion was completely resected, and a shunt and reconstruction with a saphenous vein graft were performed. pathology revealed a malignant chemodectoma with invasion to 2 of the 5 lymph nodes removed. radiotherapy (50 Gy) was given after the operation. She is well and free of disease 68 months after the resection. The third case was in a 61-year-old woman who presented with an 8-cm nontender, hard, immobile mass in the left upper neck that displaced the left wall of the oropharynx toward the midline. A carotid arteriogram showed a CBT. On computed tomography, the tumor extended to the infratemporal fossa with no bone involvement. The lesion was embolized with a 40% reduction in vascularity. At surgical exploration, the tumor involved the sternocleidomastoid muscle and the lymph nodes at levels II and III, and the internal carotid artery could not be dissected free at the skull base, so only a partial resection was performed. This patient was lost to follow-up. These 3 cases are in agreement with the literature. Locoregional control is usually obtained with complete primary tumor resection and lymphadenectomy and eventual radiotherapy. Surgery with radiotherapy seems to be effective for isolated metastases. Current multidisciplinary treatments have been unsuccessful in controlling disseminated disease.
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ranking = 3.598940341978
keywords = carotid, carotid artery, artery
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5/55. Aortico-pulmonary paraganglioma associated with bilateral carotid body tumors. Diagnostic presentation and clinical implications.

    A case of mediastinal paraganglioma in association with bilateral carotid body tumors is presented. Characteristic radiological findings included a hypointense signal in T1-weighted, a hyperintense signal in T2-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images and a vascular enhancement pattern in dynamic contrast enhanced MR imaging. Thus, feeding vessels could be depicted noninvasively. The importance of family screening in affected individuals is stressed, as a hereditary form of the disease exists in which multiple paragangliomas are common.
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ranking = 2.5
keywords = carotid
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6/55. A diagnostic and therapeutic approach to paragangliomas of the larynx.

    BACKGROUND: Differentiating paragangliomas from moderately differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma in the larynx is a difficult management problem. As the biological behavior of these 2 entities is different, we developed an algorithm for the preoperative diagnosis and treatment of this disease. DESIGN: The sample case from which the algorithm was developed consisted of a 69-year-old man who was transferred to us after tracheostomy and an attempt at biopsy for airway obstruction secondary to a vascular mass. biopsy resulted in substantial bleeding. Flexible laryngoscopy showed a vascular mass of the supraglottis. A computed tomographic scan showed 2 vascular masses at the carotid bifurcation and in the larynx. An arteriogram confirmed synchronous vascular tumors. RESULTS: The arteriogram showed the superior thyroid artery to be the major feeder vessel to this mass, a situation commonly seen in paragangliomas but not other neuroendocrine tumors. The presence of synchronous lesions and a vascular mass based on the superior thyroid artery helped differentiate paraganglioma from the other neuroendocrine tumors. As the biological behavior of paragangliomas is relatively benign, we performed a conservative supraglottic laryngectomy and excision of the carotid body tumor. Histologic diagnosis and immunohistochemical analysis confirmed the diagnosis of paraganglioma. CONCLUSIONS: The vascular nature of neuroendocrine tumors prevents preoperative pathological diagnosis. Radiologic features demonstrating a vascular mass with a dominant feeder vessel by the superior or inferior thyroid artery may help in the clinical diagnosis of paragangliomas of the larynx. Since paragangliomas are rarely malignant, a conservative surgical procedure should suffice.
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ranking = 1.0077710156149
keywords = carotid, artery
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7/55. Nasal paraganglioma. A case report.

    Nasal paraganglioma. A case report. Nonchromaffin paragangliomas or chemodectomas arise in paraganglia distributed in various parts of the body. The jugular bulb, the vagal body and the bifurcation of the carotid artery are the most common sites of origin of paraganglioma in the head and neck region. Paragangliomas in the nose and paranasal sinuses are extremely rare and very few cases of definite paraganglioma arising primarily in the nose or paranasal sinuses have been reported. The paraganglioma is a slow-growing tumour that produces nasal obstruction, profuse epistaxis and facial swelling. Complete excision of the glomus tumour is normally curative. We report a case of nasal paraganglioma and discuss the diagnosis and therapy.
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ranking = 0.59894034197804
keywords = carotid, carotid artery, artery
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8/55. Chemodectoma of the vagus nerve. Report of a case with ultrastructural study.

    light and electron microscopic studies of a chemodectoma of the vagus nerve are presented. Forty-four cases of vagal chemodectoma have been reported to date, but no electronmicroscopic studies have been published. The ultramicroscopic studies showed the presence of clear and dark cells and membrane-bound neurosecretory granules, and the absence of sustentacular cells and nerve endings. Similar findings have been reported in cases of carotid body and glomus jugulare tumors.
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ranking = 0.5
keywords = carotid
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9/55. Familial paraganglioma.

    Paragangliomas are unusual tumors that are sometimes familial. We treated a family who exhibited multiple head and neck paragangliomas (HNPGs) and pheochromocytomas. The purpose was to determine the clinical characteristics of paragangliomas with familial history and to define a better standardized proceeding in the management of these tumors. patients diagnosed with head and neck paragangliomas and identified retrospectively through clinical otolaryngology practices were given a medical and family history questionnaire. We studied a family who exhibited familial paragangliomas. This relationship was examined by reviewing the medical records of family members with verified tumors, carrying out neck computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging on their relatives to look for tumors that had been unrecognized in the past. All patients underwent a complete head and neck examination. The initial evaluation usually included CT and/or MRI. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging contributed additional information about tumor extension. angiography was performed in every patient with carotid body tumor, with one undergoing therapeutic embolization to reduce the tumor size. Eleven tumors were identified in four patients with a familial history. Familial disease was initially determined by pedigree analysis. Four patients with a median age of 31 years (range: 25-42) underwent surgery. Median follow-up was 5 years (range 2-14); carotid angiography provided essential mainstays for the definite diagnosis. All patients underwent successful surgical resection of the tumor after the appropriate preoperative preparation. There were no perioperative deaths or hemiplegia. Three patients had bilaterality carotid body paragangliomas. One patient had three paragangliomas, and two patients had bilateral carotid body paragangliomas associated with pheochromocytoma. Clinically functioning tumors and malignant tumors were not identified, and none of the patients died after surgery. During follow-up, none of the patients developed recurrence or metastatic disease. The carotid body paraganglioma (CBPG) and glomus vagale manifested as asymptomatic neck masses. The clinical pheochromocytomas typically present with uncontrolled hypertension. In conclusion, paragangliomas are rare, with multicentricity being more common in patients with a familial history. In patients with familial paragangliomas, high-resolution computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging are recommended for early screening and contributed additional information about the tumor extension and definitive treatment. Early surgery is recommended to minimize major risks.
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ranking = 2.5
keywords = carotid
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10/55. Nonchromaffin paraganglioma (chemodectoma) of thyroid region.

    A case of a paraganglioma located over the thyroid cartilage in the midline is reported. The tumor had all the appearances of a carotid body tumor, but its odd location could not be explained on the basis of previously known areas where paraganglionic tissues have been found. Since a paraganglioma has also hitherto been described within the thyroid gland, clinicians and pathologists alike are cautioned that unusually located paragangliomas may be expected in the future.
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keywords = carotid
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