Pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis (PCI) is a rare condition characterized by the presence of gas-filled cysts in the subserosa or submucosa of the bowel wall. It is associated with various disorders including chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, autoimmune disorders, and organ transplantation. PCI has also been observed following Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT), associated with chemotherapy, acute Graft versus Host Disease (GvHD), immunosuppression, and infections. Computed tomography (CT) provides an easy diagnosis because it highlights the presence of air bubbles in the intestinal wall and possible pneumoperitoneum. We report the case of a patient with severe acquired medullary aplasia undergoing allogeneic HSCT with subsequent development of cutaneous GvHD and an incidental finding of PCI during a CT scan of the chest in absence of gastrointestinal symptoms. Our work aims at clarifying a possible complication in pediatric patients undergoing HSCT to guide young or non-pediatric radiologists in the identification of this rare condition, helping the clinician in the correct conservative management of these patients and reserving the surgical treatment only to specific complications.
Pleuropulmonary blastoma (PPB) is a rare but aggressive pediatric tumor originates from either lung or pleura. It was recently linked to the DICER I mutation as a part of predisposition syndrome for different type of tumor. It is characterized histologically by a primitive, variably mixed blastomatous and sarcomatous tissue. PPB is classified into four subtypes: cystic (type I and type Ir); cystic and solid (type II); solid (type III).
PPB has no characteristic imaging findings. Integrated imaging can help to make a differential diagnosis and to recognize the subtypes in order to set up therapy. An early recognition and differentiation from congenital airway malformations and other benign cysts are very important.
The treatment consists in a multimodal therapy including surgery and chemoterapy.
We report a case of 3 years old female admitted at our hospital with fever, non productive cough and dyspnea, who was diagnosed with type II PPB.
Thymoma is a rare neoplasm of the anterior mediastinum, which originates from the epithelium of the thymic gland; it occurs mainly in middle-aged adults and is much less common in children. The tumor has slow growth and is asymptomatic in most pediatric cases, thus resulting in an accidental discovery; one-third of the young patient presents symptoms related to the compression of the tumor mass on the surrounding anatomic structures and/or related to paraneoplastic syndromes. Surgery is the treatment of choice and complete resection of the thymoma achieves excellent long-term results in terms of disease-free survival. In this article, we report the clinical case of a 21-month-old girl who came to our observation for persistent cough for over a month investigated with a chest X-ray, performed in another hospital. The X-ray showed an extensive opacification of the left hemithorax with contralateral dislocation of the mediastinum. The instrumental investigations carried out in our hospital (ultrasound, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance of the chest) showed a voluminous expansive mass of the left antero-superior mediastinum, which occupied the entire ipsilateral hemithorax and not dissociable from the thymus. At the histologic examination, the mass resulted to be a B1 thymoma with a low degree of malignancy according to the histologic classification of thymic tumors of the World Health Organization.
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