How to Diagnose Thymoma
Instructions
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Expect a variety of symptoms from thymomas. One third of patients will be asymptomatic and diagnosed incidentally from a chest radiograph. One third will have only local symptoms caused by compression of the thymoma into adjacent structures and one third will present with myasthenia gravis (MG.)
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2
Observe clinical signs such as immunodeficiency disorders and paraneoplastic syndromes, including red blood aplasia, hypogammaglobulinemia and MG. Patients with Good syndrome may have recurrent bacterial, fungal and viral infections.
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Conduct laboratory studies to assess the effect of the thymoma. A complete blood count should show anemia, granulocytopenia and thrombocytopenia. Immunoglobulin levels should be checked routinely because patients with thymoma usually have Panhypogammaglobulinemia. The CD4+ T-cell count also will be low and the B-cell count will be low or even absent.
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4
Use a Computed Tomography (CT) scan or Magnetic Imaging Resonance (MRI) to define the mass and identify the presence of cysts, fat or necrosis. Imaging with radioactive tracers also has proven useful.
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5
Determine the histology of the thymoma. These have traditionally been classified into the four non-specific categories based on the number of lymphocytes and the shape of the epithelial cells: epithelial thymoma, lymphocytic, mixed lymphocytic, and epithelial and spindle cell.
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