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Case 20 - Retropharyngeal Phlegmon

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Let's have a look at this patient who had difficulty

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swallowing. The brain images look pretty good.

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The orbits are unremarkable.

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The parotid glands show no abnormalities.

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The nasopharyngeal structures are normal in appearance.

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As we continue down into the, from the oral cavity

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to the oropharynx to the supraglottic larynx,

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were looking pretty good.

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We're down to the aryepiglottic folds and the

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supraglottic larynx, and the pyriform sinus.

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And we notice that there is a low density collection that has

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become apparent behind the esophagus

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in the retropharyngeal space.

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And here is the esophagus.

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Here is the trachea. Here is that low density collection.

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Now, is this just edema?

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Is this a phlegmon?

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Should we call this an abscess?

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We're down in the portion of the retropharyngeal space,

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in the infrahyoid portion of the retropharyngeal

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space where there are no lymph nodes.

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So we say that the retropharyngeal space contains retropharyngeal

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lymphadenopathy to the level of the hyoid bone. Below

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the hyoid bone, in the infrahyoid retropharyngeal space,

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there are no lymph nodes.

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So this is not necrotic lymphadenopathy.

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Is it, however, merely edema,

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or is this a true retropharyngeal abscess/

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phlegmon? Abscess, we usually will look for a peripheral rim enhancement

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and mass effect phlegmon.

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Just sort of a nondescript low-density collection without well

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defined borders, which is what I would probably call this case.

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Notice that we are starting to enter the mediastinum.

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The esophagus remains anterior.

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We're still in the retropharyngeal space,

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anterior to the longus colli, longus capitis muscle complex,

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and we continue into the mediastinum where you continue to

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see this low-density collection. Because it has

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mass effect and is actually lifting the

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esophagus from its normal position, further posterior,

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this does have mass effect.

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So I'm going to call it either a phlegmon or an abscess.

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In this case,

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due to the absence of well-defined borders and enhancing,

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this is going to be termed a retropharyngeal phlegmon.

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You notice that the patient has extensive infiltrates in the

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lung and this was indeed an infectious inflammatory etiology

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in this individual. It ended at approximately T4.

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So first rib, second rib, third rib,

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fourth rib were back to a normal location of the esophagus.

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So in the retropharyngeal space.

Report

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Neuroradiology

Head and Neck

Emergency

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