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Case of the Week 5 2016

*30-year-old female with elevated calcium levels.

What is the most likely diagnosis?

1. Lymph node
2. Parathyroid adenoma
3. Parathyroid hyperplasia
4. Eccentric thyroid nodule

Answer

Answer: Parathyroid adenoma

Case Discussion:

Ultrasound revealed an oval-shaped parathyroid adenoma. Power and color Doppler showed small blood vessels leading to the adenoma.

X

Parathyroid adenoma is benign tumour of the parathyroid gland. It is the most common cause of primary hyperparathyroidism. Parathyroid adenomas are usually oval or bean-shaped; however larger ones can be multilobulated. The majority of them is juxtathyroid and located immediately posterior or inferior to the thyroid gland. The vast majority of them are solitary. They tend to be homogeneously hypoechoic lesions located juxtathyroid, an echogenic thyroid capsule separating the thyroid from the parathyroid can be seen on ultrasound. Doppler ultrasound can generally demonstrate a characteristic extrathyroidal feeding vessel, entering the gland at one of the poles.

References:
1. Wieneke JA, Smith A. Parathyroid adenoma. Head Neck Pathol. 2008;2 (4): 305-8.
2. Abikhzer G, Levental M, Rush C. High resolution MRI in the detection of an intrathymic parathyroid adenoma. Br J Radiol. 2006;79 (945): e78-80.
3. Johnson NA, Tublin ME, Ogilvie JB. Parathyroid imaging: technique and role in the preoperative evaluation of primary hyperparathyroidism. AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2007;188 (6): 1706-15.
4. Hoang JK, Sung WK, Bahl M et-al. How to perform parathyroid 4D CT: tips and traps for technique and interpretation. Radiology. 2014;270 (1): 15-24.