Mediastinal masses are indicative of a broad range of
disease states, some of which may be entirely asymptomatic or exhibit symptoms
and indicators of intrathoracic pathology. A chest X-ray can identify a
mediastinal mass, but a CT scan is required to characterize the mass in further
detail.
Patients from our hospital who were suspected to have a
mediastinal mass either on clinical examination or on the basis of an abnormal
chest radiograph were included in the study. The patients were subjected to a
thorough history and clinical examination. The advantages of CT such as better
spatial resolutions, shorter imaging time, less expensive and its availability
made CT a better imaging technique. Co-existing lung abnormalities and
calcifications within the lesions are better appreciated on CT. CT examination
of the patient was done using a Philips Ingenuity 128-slice CT scanner. Our study
included a total of 50 cases, 31 males and 19 females. The anterior mediastinum
is the most commonly involved compartment (n=27, 42.2%), followed by the middle
(n=23, 35.9%) and posterior mediastinum (n=14, 21.8%). Thymic masses (n=7,
46.6%), Aneurysms (n=6, 54.5%) and Nerve sheath tumors (n=4, 33.3%) are the
most common masses to have isolated compartmental involvement of anterior,
middle and posterior mediastinum respectively. The majority of the mediastinal
masses are well defined (n=36, 72%), with soft tissue (n=34, 68%) attenuation
on plain CT, showing heterogeneous enhancement (n=22, 44%) on the
administration of intravenous contrast. Computed tomography is an important
modality in the evaluation of mediastinal masses for their exact localization,
analyzing their morphology and arriving at a provisional diagnosis for optimal
patient management. Most of the mediastinal masses are well defined, with soft
tissue attenuation on the plain study, showing heterogenous enhancement in
contrast study. Thus, CT with an overall accuracy of 94% is an important
imaging modality in the evaluation of a mediastinal mass.
Author(s) Details
Aniket M. Zope
Department of Radiodiagnosis, Symbiosis Medical College for
Women & Symbiosis University Hospital and Research Centre, Symbiosis
International (Deemed University), Pune - 412115, Maharashtra, India.
Snehil Kumar
Department of Radiodiagnosis, Symbiosis Medical College for
Women & Symbiosis University Hospital and Research Centre, Symbiosis
International (Deemed University), Pune - 412115, Maharashtra, India.
Uday M. Zende
Department of Radiodiagnosis, Symbiosis Medical College for
Women & Symbiosis University Hospital and Research Centre, Symbiosis
International (Deemed University), Pune - 412115, Maharashtra, India.
Amol A. Gautam
Department of Radiodiagnosis, Symbiosis Medical College for
Women & Symbiosis University Hospital
and Research Centre, Symbiosis International (Deemed University), Pune -
412115, Maharashtra, India.
Please see the link:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mria/v10/1235
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