| Literature DB >> 30579363 |
Mari Kirishima1,2, Sohsuke Yamada3, Mitsuhisa Shinya4, Shun Onishi5, Yuko Goto6, Ikumi Kitazono6, Tsubasa Hiraki7, Michiyo Higashi7, Akira I Hida6, Akihide Tanimoto6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Epignathus is a rare congenital orofacial teratoma infrequently associated with intracranial extension. Intracranial extension of an epignathus indicates a poor prognosis; however, only a small number of such cases have been reported. While there have been some studies reporting cases of epignathus expanding directly into the cranium, others have reported no communication between an epignathus and an intracranial tumor. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Epignathus; Hypoxia; Immature teratoma; Intracranial extension
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30579363 PMCID: PMC6303979 DOI: 10.1186/s13000-018-0776-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Fig. 1Ultrasonographic and MRI images. a Three-dimensional ultrasonographic image at gestational week 25 shows a giant tumor around the neck and face (white arrow), strongly suggesting an epignathus. b Ultrasonographic image at gestational week 26 shows a giant tumor around the neck (red arrow), and an intracranial tumorous lesion (red arrowhead). c MRI image at gestational week 25 suggests a connection between the giant tumor around the neck (yellow arrow) and the intracranial tumor (yellow arrowhead)
Fig. 2Macroscopic findings at autopsy. a The epignathus, a large reddish multicystic tumor is seen protruding from the mouth. b There is a defect in the soft palate within which the base of the epignathus is located (red arrowhead). c The intracranial tumor is covered by a thin capsule (yellow arrowhead) and there is no invasion of the brain. d After removal of the stem of the intracranial tumor, a small hole, measuring 2 mm in diameter, is detected on the right side of the sella turcica. A communication can be seen between the epignathus and the intracranial tumor through this hole (black arrowhead)
Fig. 3Macroscopic images of the epignathus. a At autopsy, the epignathus is a large reddish multicystic tumor. b After formalin fixation, the epignathus is seen as a dark-brown-colored tumor and cysts containing serous or bloody fluids. c The cut section shows whitish solid parts and cysts. A small component resembling a lung is seen (arrowhead). d The intracranial tumor is white and soft
Fig. 4Microscopic images of tridermal components in the epignathus. a Immature neural tubules (hematoxylin and eosin [HE] stain, × 100). b Smooth muscle (HE stain, × 100). c Renal glomeruli (HE stain, × 100). d Hepatocytes (HE stain, × 100)
Fig. 5Microscopic images of tridermal components in the intracranial tumor. a Immature neural tubules (hematoxylin and eosin [HE] stain, × 100). b Cartilage (HE stain, × 100). c Esophagus (HE stain, × 100). d Hepatocytes (HE stain, × 100)
Components of the epignathus and the intracranial tumor
| epignathus | intracranial tumor | |
|---|---|---|
| ectoderm | neural tube, glial tissue, retina, melanocytes, skin and appendages, exocrine glands (resemblings pancreatic tissue) | neural tube, glial tissue, choroid plexus |
| mesoderm | cartilage, bone, adipose tissue, smooth muscle, vessels | cartilage |
| endoderm | hepatocytes, renal glomeruli, lung, esophagus, gastric mucosa, intestinal mucosa with goblet cells | liver, glandular epithelium, exocrine glands (resembling pancreatic tissue) |
Fig. 6Microscopic images. a The lungs of the fetus are developed into the saccular stage (hematoxylin and eosin [HE] stain, × 100). b The lung seen in the epignathus is in the canalicular stage and is immature compared to the lungs of the fetus (HE stain, × 100)
Organ weights of the fetus with means and standard deviations [7]
| placenta [g] | body weight [g] | CRL [cm] | thymus [g] | heart [g] | lung (bilateral) [g] | |
| Our case | 840 | 1224–280 = 944 | 25 | 2.4 | 5.8 | 4.7 + 6.0 = 10.7 |
| means and standard deviations [ | 240–380 | 836 ± 197 | 24.2 ± 2.5 | 2.3 ± 1.2 | 5.8 ± 1.9 | 22.1 ± 9.7 |
| spleen [g] | liver [g] | kidney (bilateral) [g] | adrenal gland (bilateral) [g] | brain [g] | ||
| Our case | 1.8 | 84.4 | 4.5 + 4.4 = 8.9 | 2.6 + 2.4 = 5.0 | 142.5 | |
| means and standard deviations [ | 1.7 ± 1.0 | 35.1 ± 13.3 | 8.6 ± 3.0 | 2.5 ± 1.1 | 118 ± 21 | |
Clinical and pathological summary of our case and 13 previously reported cases of epignathus with intracranial tumor. Earlier cases (1861–1963) were presented in the report by Y. Hosoda [14]
| Author | year | Mother | Autosite | Epignathus | Connection | Intracranial tumor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wegelin [ | 1861 | para 1 | 6 fetal mo., m. | 8x10x6 cm. tridermal, feet with toes | sella turcica & crista galli | 4 cysts in the base of skull |
| Breslau & Rindfleisch [ | 1864 | 28 y-o., para 1, polyhydroamnion | 23–24 fetal w., f., B.W. 1548 g | fist-sized, mouth, eyes, extremities, Foetus in foetu | hypophyseal area, 8–10 cm stalk | tumor with extremities & umbilicus |
| Arnold [ | 1870 | 28 y-o., para 3 | 6 fetal mo., f., B.W. 1550 g | tridermal | sella turcica, 1 cm in diameter, consisted of glial tissue | 5 cm in diameter, reached to right temporal scale, neuroglial |
| Müller [ | 1881 | no information | full term, 6 days survived | 23 cm in length, left oral cavity, broad based, ecto- & meso-derm | none | Walnut-sized, right middle cranial fossa, connective tissue & capillaries |
| Schükry [ | 1923 | no information | 7 fetal mo., f., cleft palate | chestnut-sized, pharynx, tridermal | sella turcica, firm fibrous tissue | right side of sella turcica, tridermal |
| Kraus [ | 1929 | no information | premature, f., B.L. 42 cm | 37 × 30 mm, intraoral, tridermal | craniopharyngeal canal, 7–8 mm in length, 4.5 mm in width | 12x18x15 mm, sella turcica, tridermal |
| Ehrich [ | 1945 | 18 y-o., primipara, polyhydroamnion | 5 fetal mo., still born, f., B.W. 1760 g, large head | 5x8x4 cm, ecto- & meso-derm, pharynz | brain tissue in sphenoid bone | filling the cranial cavity, tridermal |
| Hosoda [ | 1963 | 26 y-o., gravidae iv, para 0 | 36 fetal w., f., B.W. 1950 g | 6.5 × 3.5 × 2.0 cm, polypoid tumor hanging down from the upper lip, ecto- & meso-derm | no direct connection | anterior cranial fossa, 5 mm anterior to the sella turcica, spherical tumor, 4 × 3.5 × 2.8 cm, tridermal |
| Smith [ | 1993 | 30 y-o., para 3 | 29 fetal w., aborted., f., B.W. 1330 g | 3.5 cm in diameter, oral tumor attached to the hard palate in the midline, tridermal | tumor was in continuity, via a narrow defect in the hard palate, sphenoid bone, third ventricle, extending to the lateral ventricles | central tumour mass separating the temporal lobes, which progected rostrally between dilated lateral ventricles, partly replacing the septum pellucidum |
| Smith [ | 1993 | 28 y-o., para 1, polyhydroamnion | 18 fetal w., aborted., f. | 2 cm in diameter, slightly gelatinous nodule protruding ftom the right upper lip and attached to the right maxilla, tridermal | narrow cord which traversed the nasal bones and entered the cranial cavity in the region of the pituitary fossa and direct communication with the mass in the frontal lobes. | partly cystic, lobular mass replacing the frontal. Predominantly neuroglial, with prominent ependymal rosettes |
| Johnston [ | 2007 | no information | 38 fetal w., m., | 4 × 5 cm, midline oropharyngeal mass protruding through a cleft deformity | none | anterior and middle cranial fossae |
| Calda [ | 2010 | 29 y-o., primigravida | 20 fetal w., aborted., f., B.W. 310 g | 2 cm in diameter, lobulated round vascular mass, visible trhough the open oral cavity, tridermal | none | 13x10x7 mm, neuroepithelial intracranial cyst |
| Wang [ | 2017 | 31 y-o., primagravida | 17 fetal w., aborted, m., 355 g | 6.7 × 6.5 × 5.0 cm, protruding from the right maxillofacial region, tridermal | directly growing upward | middle and posterior cranial fossa, 3.5 cm in diameter, tridermal |
| Our case | 2018 | 32 y-o., 3 gravida para 2 | 27 fetal w., stillborn, f., 1228 g | 12x6x6 cm, 270 g, solid and multicystic tumor, based on the soft palate and protruding from mouth | the right side of the sella turcica, 2 mm in diameter | middle cranial fossa, capsuled tumor, 24 g, no direct invasion to the brain |