| Literature DB >> 31914494 |
Jae Ha Hwang1, Dong Gyu Lee1, Ho Seup Sim1, Kwang Seog Kim1, Sam Yong Lee1.
Abstract
Schwannoma is a slow-growing, well-demarcated, benign soft tissue tumor of the peripheral nerve sheath. It commonly develops in the head and neck region, usually in the parapharyngeal space. In this case, a 42-year-old woman visited the outpatient department to manage a painless mass on her left cheek. She had no history of concern and no neurological symptoms were observed. In the enhanced computed tomography scan, a 2.8 × 2.8 × 1.8 cm, heterogeneously enhanced tumor was detected in the left masseter muscle. A tumor resection under general anesthesia was planned. For the resection, a facelift incision was chosen; branches of the facial nerve were identified and retrogradely dissected. A well-marginated, yellowish, solid mass was found in the left masseter muscle. The mass was excised and given a histopathological diagnosis of schwannoma. A definite diagnosis of schwannoma, originating in the masseter muscle, is difficult to arrive at with radiographic findings alone; it is often misdiagnosed as intramuscular hemangioma. Histopathological examinations, including fine-needle aspiration or histological biopsy after surgery, are necessary. Using a facelift incision with retrograde facial nerve dissection, tumor resection in an intramasseteric lesion can be performed efficiently, without nerve damage, or leaving conspicuous scars on the face.Entities:
Keywords: Masseter muscle; Neurilemmoma; Rhytidoplasty
Year: 2019 PMID: 31914494 PMCID: PMC6949502 DOI: 10.7181/acfs.2019.00549
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Craniofac Surg ISSN: 2287-1152
Fig. 1.In the enhanced computed tomography image, a 2.8×2.8×1.8 cm heterogeneously enhancing mass in the left masseter muscle can be observed.
Fig. 2.In the operative field, a well-separated mass was found in the masseter muscle fibers. It was continuous with a small branch of nerves. The zygomatic branch of the facial nerve has been dissected and preserved (black arrow).
Fig. 3.Photomicrograph (H&E, ×100) reveals that the tumor consists of focal cellular (Antoni A, black arrow) areas and hypocellular (Antoni B, black arrowhead) areas with vacuolar degeneration.
Fig. 4.A clinical photograph taken 6 months after excision. The facelift incision, with pretragal and occipital incision lines, was strategically placed and is well camouflaged without any tragal distortion.