Incessant Bilobed Thymus in an Case Report Old Male Cadaver

Authors

  • Sudikshya KC Department of Anatomy, National Medical College, Birgunj
  • Aashish Kumar Shah Department of Anatomy, National Medical College, Birgunj
  • Dipa Rai Khaling Department of Medical Surgical Nursing, National Medical College, Birgunj

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/medphoenix.v2i1.18391

Keywords:

Diagnostic, Fibrofatty Involution, Incessant, Invasive procedures, Lymphoid organ

Abstract

Thymus is bilobed primary lymphoid organ situated in superior and anterior mediastinum. The appearance of thymus varies considerably with age. It reaches maximum size at puberty and eventually undergoes “fibro fatty involution”, but it may persist actively to old age. Therefore, normal appearance and size of thymus have been elusive. Embryologically, it develops, as two separate organs from the endoderm of third pharyngeal pouches of embryo in common with inferior parathyroid glands and fuse in the midline. The study was carried on 10 embalmed cadavers of known sex in Anatomy Department of National Medical College, Birgunj, Nepal. We found a large bilobed thymus in about 65 year old male cadaver. This fact is clinically important to make differential diagnosis of radiological review in cases of mediastinal mass. A thorough knowledge of its anatomical and embryological features of the thymus, it’s normal variations, incessant in adults is necessary before doing any therapeutic, diagnostic and invasive procedures.

Med Phoenix Vol.2(1) July 2017, 67-70

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Published

2017-10-13

How to Cite

KC, S., Shah, A. K., & Khaling, D. R. (2017). Incessant Bilobed Thymus in an Case Report Old Male Cadaver. Med Phoenix, 2(1), 67–70. https://doi.org/10.3126/medphoenix.v2i1.18391

Issue

Section

Case Reports