A Bilateral, Non-syndromic, Type III Second Branchial Arch Sinus in a Neonate: a Case Report

The incidence of a second branchial arch sinus accounts for 26–60% of all existing congenital malformations deriving from the branchial apparatus. They are most usually detected between 14 months and 7 years of age, while their incidence during neonatal period and infancy accounts for 0.06% of all c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ioannis Patoulias, Evangelia Rachmani, Konstantinos Farmakis, Vasileios Rafailidis, Maria Kalogirou, Dimitrios Patoulias
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Karolinum Press 2018-07-01
Series:Acta Medica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://actamedica.lfhk.cuni.cz/61/1/0033/
id doaj-90c4162d2b5f4aa497140b3ef9cded5e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-90c4162d2b5f4aa497140b3ef9cded5e2020-11-24T21:44:58ZengKarolinum PressActa Medica1211-42861805-96942018-07-01611333610.14712/18059694.2018.217062A Bilateral, Non-syndromic, Type III Second Branchial Arch Sinus in a Neonate: a Case ReportIoannis PatouliasEvangelia RachmaniKonstantinos FarmakisVasileios RafailidisMaria KalogirouDimitrios PatouliasThe incidence of a second branchial arch sinus accounts for 26–60% of all existing congenital malformations deriving from the branchial apparatus. They are most usually detected between 14 months and 7 years of age, while their incidence during neonatal period and infancy accounts for 0.06% of all cases. The aim of this case study is to emphasize three rare characteristic features: the manifestation during neonatal period, the bilateral localization and the ultrasonographic diagnostic documentation. A 25 days old girl was admitted by her parents due to the presence of mucoid excretion from two small openings found on the neck. These openings were found bilaterally, between the mid and lower third of the anterior border of sternocleidomastoid muscle. Diagnosis was confirmed via ultrasonography. The patient underwent elective surgery during early infancy and both branchial fistulas were excised. Patient’s postoperative course was uneventful. In conclusion: – in cases of a bilateral second branchial arch sinus, the branchio-oto-renal (BOR) or branchio-otic (BO) syndromes must be excluded; – ultrasound scan can be used for the thorough evaluation of the sinus anatomic course and the relationship with the adjacent anatomic structures; – rompt diagnosis and early therapeutic intervention, even during neonatal period, ensures an uneventful post-operation course.https://actamedica.lfhk.cuni.cz/61/1/0033/bilateral branchial sinussecond branchial archultrasonographyneonate
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ioannis Patoulias
Evangelia Rachmani
Konstantinos Farmakis
Vasileios Rafailidis
Maria Kalogirou
Dimitrios Patoulias
spellingShingle Ioannis Patoulias
Evangelia Rachmani
Konstantinos Farmakis
Vasileios Rafailidis
Maria Kalogirou
Dimitrios Patoulias
A Bilateral, Non-syndromic, Type III Second Branchial Arch Sinus in a Neonate: a Case Report
Acta Medica
bilateral branchial sinus
second branchial arch
ultrasonography
neonate
author_facet Ioannis Patoulias
Evangelia Rachmani
Konstantinos Farmakis
Vasileios Rafailidis
Maria Kalogirou
Dimitrios Patoulias
author_sort Ioannis Patoulias
title A Bilateral, Non-syndromic, Type III Second Branchial Arch Sinus in a Neonate: a Case Report
title_short A Bilateral, Non-syndromic, Type III Second Branchial Arch Sinus in a Neonate: a Case Report
title_full A Bilateral, Non-syndromic, Type III Second Branchial Arch Sinus in a Neonate: a Case Report
title_fullStr A Bilateral, Non-syndromic, Type III Second Branchial Arch Sinus in a Neonate: a Case Report
title_full_unstemmed A Bilateral, Non-syndromic, Type III Second Branchial Arch Sinus in a Neonate: a Case Report
title_sort bilateral, non-syndromic, type iii second branchial arch sinus in a neonate: a case report
publisher Karolinum Press
series Acta Medica
issn 1211-4286
1805-9694
publishDate 2018-07-01
description The incidence of a second branchial arch sinus accounts for 26–60% of all existing congenital malformations deriving from the branchial apparatus. They are most usually detected between 14 months and 7 years of age, while their incidence during neonatal period and infancy accounts for 0.06% of all cases. The aim of this case study is to emphasize three rare characteristic features: the manifestation during neonatal period, the bilateral localization and the ultrasonographic diagnostic documentation. A 25 days old girl was admitted by her parents due to the presence of mucoid excretion from two small openings found on the neck. These openings were found bilaterally, between the mid and lower third of the anterior border of sternocleidomastoid muscle. Diagnosis was confirmed via ultrasonography. The patient underwent elective surgery during early infancy and both branchial fistulas were excised. Patient’s postoperative course was uneventful. In conclusion: – in cases of a bilateral second branchial arch sinus, the branchio-oto-renal (BOR) or branchio-otic (BO) syndromes must be excluded; – ultrasound scan can be used for the thorough evaluation of the sinus anatomic course and the relationship with the adjacent anatomic structures; – rompt diagnosis and early therapeutic intervention, even during neonatal period, ensures an uneventful post-operation course.
topic bilateral branchial sinus
second branchial arch
ultrasonography
neonate
url https://actamedica.lfhk.cuni.cz/61/1/0033/
work_keys_str_mv AT ioannispatoulias abilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT evangeliarachmani abilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT konstantinosfarmakis abilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT vasileiosrafailidis abilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT mariakalogirou abilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT dimitriospatoulias abilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT ioannispatoulias bilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT evangeliarachmani bilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT konstantinosfarmakis bilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT vasileiosrafailidis bilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT mariakalogirou bilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
AT dimitriospatoulias bilateralnonsyndromictypeiiisecondbranchialarchsinusinaneonateacasereport
_version_ 1725907429960450048