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Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University
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Page 1: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Diseases of the Mediastinum &

Mediastinal Masses

Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS,Assistant Professor &

Consultant thoracic surgeonKKUH, King Saud University

Page 2: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

The Mediastinum is the region in the chest between the pleural cavities that contain the heart and other thoracic viscera except the lungs

Boundaries Lateral - parietal pleuraAnterior - sternumPosterior - vertebral column and paravertebral

guttersSuperior -thoracic inletInferior - diaphragm

Page 3: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Mediastinal Anatomy

Page 4: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Normal Mediastinum

Anterior mediastinumEverything lying forward of and superior to the heart

shadowBoundaries

Sternum, first rib, imaginary curved line following the anterior heart border and brachiocephalic vessels from the diaphragm to the thoracic inlet

ContentsThymus gland, substernal extension of the thyroid

and parathyroid gland and lymphatic tissues

Page 5: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Normal Mediastinum

Middle mediastinumDorsal to the anterior mediastinum, extends from the

lower edge of the sternum along the diaphragm and then cephalad along the posterior heart border and posterior wall of the trachea

ContentsHeart, pericardium, aortic arch and its major branches,

innominate veins and superior vena cava, pulmonary arteries and hila, trachea, group of lymph nodes, phrenic and upper vagus nerve

Page 6: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Normal Mediastinum

Posterior MediastinumOccupies the space between the back of the heart and

trachea and the front of the posterior ribs, and paravertebral gutter

It extends from the diaphragm cephalad to the first rib Contents

Esophagus, descendng aorta, azygos and hemiazygos vein, paravertebral lymph nodes, thoracic duct, lower portion of the vagus nerve and the symphathetic chain

Page 7: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 8: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 9: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 10: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Clinical Presentation

Asymptomatic massSpecific disease entities according to anatomical, and

embryologic origin50% of all mediastinal mass are asymptomatic80% of such mass are benignIncidental discovery – most common (routine CXR)Silent in early phaseMainly cause pressure symptomsMore than half are malignant if with symptoms

Page 11: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Clinical Presentation

Effects on Compression or invasion of adjacent tissues

Chest pain, from traction on mediastinal mass, tissue invasion,

or bone erosion is common

Cough, because of extrinsic compression of the trachea or

bronchi, or erosion into the airway itself

Hemoptysis, hoarseness or stridor

Page 12: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Clinical Presentation

Pleural effusion, invasion or irritation of pleural space

Dysphagia, invasion or direct invasioin of the esophagus

Pericarditis or pericardial tamponade

Right ventricular outflow obstruction and cor pulmonale

Page 13: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Clinical Presentation

• Superior vena cava

– Vulnerable to extrinsic compression and obstruction because it is thin walled and its

intravascular pressure is low, and relatively confined by lymph nodes and other rigid

structures

• Superior vena cava syndrome

– Results from the increase venous pressure in the upper thorax , head and neck

– characterized by dilation of the collateral veins in the upper portion of the head and

thorax and edema oand phlethora of the face, neck and upper torso, suffusion and

edema of the conjunctiva and cerebral symptoms such as headache, disturbance of

consciousness and visual distortion

• Bronchogenic carcinoma and lymphoma are the most common etiologies

Page 14: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Clinical Presentation

• Hoarseness, invading or compressing the nerves

• Horners syndrome, involvement of the sympathetic ganglia

• Dyspnea, from phrenic nerve involvement causing

diaphragmatic paralysis

• Tachycardia, secondary to vagus nerve involvement

• Clinical manifestations of spinal cord compression

Page 15: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Clinical Presentation

• Systemic symptoms and syndromes

• Fever, anorexia, weight loss and other non specific symptoms

of malignancy and granulomatous inflammation

Page 16: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Techniques for visualizing the mediastinum and its content & obtaining tissue Bx

• Chest PA & Lateral• Chest Ct with oral & i/v contrast• Fluoroscopy• Bronchoscopy• Esophagogram (Barrium swallow)• Isotope Scanning

• FNA• True cut Needle Bx• Medistinoscopy• VATS• Thoracotomy

Page 17: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 18: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 19: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 20: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 21: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

43 y/o female w/ Hx of asthma presents with progressive SOB, dysphagia , fatigability for 5 months. No wheeze or cough, EKG normal. CXR showed

Page 22: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

• FILM FINDINGS:-Mass just lateral to main

pulmonary artery - thick-walled smoothly-

marginated- No calcification

Page 23: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Thymoma• Anterior mediastinum• Most common (20%)of mediastinal tumor in adults but

rarely seen in children• Equal frequency in males and females • 30 – 50 yrs• 50% are asymptomatic• Various Classification : Lymphocytic, Epithelial, Spindle Cell• Most encapsulated; 35% invasive (but histologically

benign!)• Parathymic syndromes – 30-50% myasthenia gravis, – less common– hypogammaglobulinema (10%), pure

red cell aplasia (5%)

Page 24: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Thymoma (Staging)

• Stage I : contained within an intact capsule

• Stage II: extension through the capsule to surrounding fat, pleura, pericardium

• Stage III : Intrathoracic metastasis• Stage IV: Extrathoracic Metastasis

Page 25: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Thymoma(Treatment)

• Stage I : Surgical resection Recurrence 2-12%• Stage II & III : Surgery + Radiotherapy• Stage IV : Multimodality Induction chemotherapy,

surgery + post op Radiotherapy• complete surgical resection – usually good prognosis• 2-12% of resected encapsulated thymomas recur• invasive thymoma has much worse prognosis– 50% 5-

yr survival, compared to 75% in noninvasive.• Survival not affected by the presence of Myasthenia

Gravis

Page 26: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

23-year-old female had a 8-week history of fever and night sweats accompanied by a 8kg weight loss

Left anteriorMediastinal mass

Page 27: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

A CT was ordered to further characterize the mass:

• Film findings:-large, Inhomogeneou

solid, antero left mediastinal

Mass.No calcium. No fat.

Page 28: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

PATHOLOGY

• A percutaneous CT guided truecut biopsy was performed

• Pathology reported the presence of Reed- Sternberg cells.• What is the diagnosis?

Page 29: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Lymphoma

• 5-10% is mediastinal primary• Second most common Anterior Mediastinal Mass in

Adults• Malignant > Hodgkin’s & non-Hodgkin’s• Surgeon’s primary role is to provide sufficient tissue

for diagnosis and to assist in pathologic staging.• Dx: Mediastinoscopy, thoracotomy ,True cut Bx• Rx: Chemotherapy or XRT• Prognosis: Varies with tumor histology

Page 30: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 31: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

18 y/o female with R upper chest and shoulder pain x 1 month. Exacerbated by movement and inspiration. No findings on PE. Working Dx is musculoskeletal injury. A CXR done

Page 32: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

CHEST CT

- CT shows mass with areas of:•fat•fluid•soft tissue Likely

diagnosis ?

Page 33: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Germ Cell Tumors• The mediastinum is the most common location for extragonadal

germ cell tumors (GCTs) in adults• GCTs can be either benign (teratomas, dermoid cysts) or

malignant (seminomas, non-seminomatous GCTs).• Mature teratoma – most common mediastinal germ cell tumour.• All ages – particularly young adults (F>M)• Presentation – mostly asymptomatic , incidentally diagnosed on X-

ray, CT., may cause cough, dyspnea, pain• CXR: well-circumscribed, round or lobulated, calcifications in up

to 26%• CT: well-marginated, lobulated, cystic component 88%, fat 50-

75%,calcification 25-50%, fat-fluid levels diagnostic, but rare (<10%)

• Surgical excision is curative

Page 34: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Malignant Nonteratomatous Germ Cell Tumors

• Usually in the third and fourth decades of life• Symptoms: chest pain, cough, dyspnea, and hemoptysis• The superior vena cava syndrome occurs commonly• Diagnostic imaging: A large anterior mediastinal mass• Serologic measurements (α-fetoprotein and β-hCG) useful for:

– differentiating seminomas from nonseminomas tumors, – assessing response to therapy,– diagnosing relapse or failure of therapy

• Seminomas rarely produce β-hCG and never produce α-fetoprotein• More than 90% of nonseminomas secrete one or both of these

hormones• seminomas are radiosensitive and nonseminomas are relatively

radiosensitive

Page 35: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

A 46-year-old woman came to you with complain of a persistent cough for the past 3 weeks and mild dysphagia. O/E she has no respiratory distress. There is an enlarged left lobe of the thyroid gland, without any cervical adenopathy.

-Film Findings :-Trachea deviated to

right. LeftanterosuperiorMediastinal massextending intoCervical region

Page 36: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Substernal Thyroid Tissues

• Goiters usually are considered substernal (also referred to as mediastinal, intrathoracic, or retrosternal) when more than 50% of the thyroid parenchyma is located below the sternal notch

• Mediastinal goiters are classified as primary or secondary• Primary mediastinal goiters, also referred to as ectopic or

aberrant goiters, uncommon, 1% of all surgically excised goiters

• Secondary mediastinal goiters are a much more common, 5–15% of all goiters demonstrate some extension into the mediastinum

Page 37: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

• Radiographic:– Chest x-ray mediastinal mass, superior mediastinal

widening, tracheal deviation or compression– Chest CT scans define the full extent and anatomic

relationships of the substernal thyroid to surrounding structures and to facilitate preoperative planning

• serum thyroid-stimulating hormone measurement If hyperthyroidism is present antithyroid medications and beta blockade should be undertaken before elective resection

Page 38: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 39: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 40: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 41: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

A 25-year-old man incidentally discovered, asymptomatic, isolated, rounded paravertebral mass on CXR and further CT scan showed following findings. The most likely diagnosis is

“Dumb-bell”Tumor

Page 42: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Neurilemmoma(Schwannoma)

Page 43: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Neurogenic tumours

• most common tumours to arise in the posterior mediastinum.

• peripheral nerves – neurofibroma, schwannoma, malignant tumours of nerve sheath origin.• Tumours arising from sympathetic ganglia.• Peripheral nerve tumours typically originate in an

intercostal nerve in the paravertebral region. • Neurofibromas and Schwannomas present as well-defined

round or oval posterior mediastinal masses.

Page 44: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Mesenchymal Tumors

• Lipoma, Fibroma, Mesothelioma• Superior or Anterior mediastinal location• Diagnosis with CT scan

Page 45: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Benign Cysts

• Most Common in Middle mediastinum• 20% of mediastinal masses• Usually asymptomatic• Bronchogenic cyst(32%), pericardial

cyst(35%), enteric cyst(12%), thymic cyst, and thoracic duct cyst

Page 46: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Pericardial Cyst

• Thin-walled, mesothelial cell lining• most common in Right C-P angle • Simple cysts are almost always

asymptomatic• Rare cardiac impingement

Page 47: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Pericardial Cyst

Page 48: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Bronchogenic Cysts

• 30 - 60% of all mediastinal cysts• Lined by ciliated respiratory epithelium• May contain cartilages or mucous• Communicate with tracheobronchial trees• May become infected• Wheezing, dyspnea, recurrent pulmonary

infections

Page 49: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Bronchogenic Cyst

Page 50: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Aortic Aneurysm

Page 51: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Paratracheal Lymphadenopathy

Page 52: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Pleuro-pulmonary infection

Page 53: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Infectious A.Lung Abscess

Causes Clinical Features

‒ Copious production of foul smelling sputum

Investigation‒ C X R

Page 54: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 55: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Treatment Abx Drainage

‒ Internal‒ External

Pulmonary resection Indications

1. Failure of medical RX2. Giant abscess ( >6cm)3. Haemorrhage4. Inability to R/O carcinoma5. Rupture with resulting empyema

Type of Resection‒ Lobectomy

Page 56: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

B. BronchiectasisDef.Bronchial dilatationCause

Congenital Infection Obstruction

Clinical Features Cough Dyspnea Haemoptysis (50%) Clubbing

Page 57: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Investigation Bronchogram CT Bronchoscopy

Treatment Medical

‒ Resolve most cases

Surgical‒ Failure of medical Rx‒ Patient with localized disease

Page 58: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 59: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 60: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 61: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 62: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 63: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

C. Tuberculosis* 30,000 new cases occur

annually in U.S.A Cause

‒ Pulmonary‒ Extra-pulmonary

Investigation‒ C X R

Page 64: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 65: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 66: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Treatment‒ Medical‒ Surgical

Failure of medical Rx Destroyed lobe or lung Pulmonary haemorrhage Persistent open cavity with + ve

sputum Persistent broncho pulmonary

fistula

Page 67: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Hydatid cystCause

Echinococcus granulosus

DiagnosisTreatment

Page 68: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 69: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
Page 70: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
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Page 75: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Thoracic empyema

Page 76: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.

Striffeler H, Gugger M, Im Hof V, Cerny A, Furrer M, Ris HB. Ann Thorac Surg 1998;65:319-323.

Striffeler H, Ris HB, Würsten HU, Im Hof V, Stirnemann P, Althaus U. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 1994;8:585-588.

• Thoracic empyema is the collection of pus or the presence of infected fluid within the pleural cavity.

• Pleural empyema affects a large number of patients and may lead to severe and disabling sequelae in cases of inappropriate diagnosis or treatment.

Page 77: Diseases of the Mediastinum & Mediastinal Masses Dr. Waseem HAJJAR MD, FRCS, Assistant Professor & Consultant thoracic surgeon KKUH, King Saud University.
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