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Congenital masses of the lung: Changes in cross-sectional area during gestation

✍ Scribed by Winters, William D.; Effmann, Eric L.; Nghiem, Hanh V.; Nyberg, David A.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
271 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
0091-2751

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✦ Synopsis


Purpose. We assessed the growth of congenital masses of the lung during gestation using computer-assisted planimetry.

Methods. The prenatal sonograms of 8 fetuses with congenital masses of the lung were reviewed.

Results. The cross-sectional area of the mass and chest were measured on the same transverse image using computer-assisted planimetry, and the percentage of the chest occupied by the mass was determined for each study. Four masses had pathologic features of type II congenital cystic adenomatoid malformation and intralobar sequestration (CCAM/ILS), 2 were type II CCAM, 1 was type I CCAM, and 1 was bronchial atresia with bronchiectasis. Four masses increased in cross-sectional area during gestation, 1 decreased, 2 were essentially unchanged, and 1 showed an initial increase in cross-sectional area followed by a decrease later in gestation. No consistent growth pattern was seen among masses with similar histologic characteristics. The percentage of the cross-sectional area of the chest occupied by the mass decreased in 7 fetuses and was virtually unchanged in 1 during gestation. All the fetuses survived to term; the infants had an uncomplicated postnatal course and underwent surgical resection of the mass during the first year of life.

Conclusions. This study showed that in a fetus with a congenital mass of the lung and a favorable clinical outcome, growth of the chest exceeds any growth of the mass that may occur and masses with the same pathologic diagnosis have different patterns of growth in utero.