Journal List > J Korean Soc Endocrinol > v.20(4) > 1063810

Lee, Lee, Kim, Bae, Jung, Jung, Min, Lee, Lee, Kim, and Chung: Upper Airway Obstruction Caused by Intratracheal Ectopic Thyroid Tissue during Pregnancy

Abstract

Herein is report an extremely rare case of an intratracheal ectopic thyroid gland related with pregnancy. A 34-year-old woman, in gestational week 11, presented with stridor, progressive dyspnea and a choking sensation during her second pregnancy. Computed tomography of the neck and chest revealed a round intratracheal mass obstructing the airway. A bronchoscopic biopsy with LASER cauterization was performed, and the histological finding revealed normal thyroid tissue. The external thyroid of the patient was evaluated, but only found benign nodules in the thyroid gland. She underwent a segmental resection of the trachea, including the mass and the 1st tracheal cartilage. The histological findings revealed the intratracheal mass to be composed of benign thyroid tissue with nodular hyperplasia. After surgery, no pulmonary symptoms were evident. This case suggested the effect of pregnancy on thyroid tissue stimulatied due to a combination of an increasing human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) level and relative iodine deficiency during pregnancy. This is the first report on the detection of intratracheal ectopic thyroid tissue during pregnancy in Korea.

Figures and Tables

Fig. 1
Lateral view of the neck shows a discrete, sharply defined, rounded lesion that narrows airway.
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Fig. 2
A. Neck CT scan shows a 2.1 cm-sized round lesion arising from the postero-lateral wall of the subglottic trachea and the airway at the level of the lesion is near totally occluded. B. Sagittal view of the airway shows small extraluminal component that is connected with intraluminal lesion.
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Fig. 3
Thyroid sonography shows a 0.6 cm-sized low echoic nodule with internal calcification, and 0.7 cm-sized nonspecific low echoic nodule and 0.4 cm-sized cyst are also detected.
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Fig. 4
I131 thyroid scan shows mildly enlarged thyroid gland with heterogeneous radioiodine uptake (10.3%). The scan do not show any lesion of abnormal radioiodine uptake.
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Fig. 5
A. Upper trachea is almost completely obstructed by round mass with smooth surface covered by intact mucosa. This mass is located 2 cm distal to vocal cord on the left posterolateral wall of trachea. B. Dilated tracheal lumen is seen after mass resection using LASER cauterization.
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Fig. 6
Fine needle aspiration biopsy of thyroid nodule shows several small follicles and colloid material, favoring nodular hyperplasia.
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Fig. 7
A. Gross finding of segmental resection of trachea shows homogenous yellow and whitish intraluminal polypoid mass, growing from external area of trachea to lumen. B. The microscopic finding shows that the mass shows thyroid follicles with nodular hyperplasia. Note the thyroid cartilage adjacent to the thyroid follicles. (H&E, ×100)
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Table 1
Differential Diagnosis of Intratracheal Ectopic Thyroid
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