Site icon Diseases Treatments Dictionary

Branchial Cleft Cyst – Complications, Symptoms, and Prevention.

What is a branchial cleft cyst?

A branchial cleft cyst is a type of birth defect in which a lump develops on one or both sides of your child’s neck or below the collarbone. This type of birth defect is also known as a branchial cleft remnant.

This birth defect occurs during embryonic development when tissues in the neck and collarbone, or branchial cleft, don’t develop normally. It may appear as an opening on one or both sides of your child’s neck. Fluid draining from these openings may form in a pocket, or a cyst. This can become infected or seep out of an opening in your child’s skin.

Types of Branchial Cleft Cyst

There are four main types of Branchial cleft abnormalities

The most common type of Branchial cleft abnormality is ‘Second branchial cleft sinuses,’ or the failure of fusion of the second and third branchial arches.

Pathophysiology

At the fourth week of embryonic life, the development of 4 branchial (or pharyngeal) clefts results in 5 ridges known as the branchial (or pharyngeal) arches, which contribute to the formation of various structures of the head, the neck, and the thorax. The second arch grows caudally and, ultimately, covers the third and fourth arches. The buried clefts become ectoderm-lined cavities, which normally involute around week 7 of development. If a portion of the cleft fails to involute completely, the entrapped remnant forms an epithelium-lined cyst with or without a sinus tract to the overlying skin.

What are the causes and risk factors of a branchial cleft cyst?

This is a congenital birth defect that occurs early in embryonic development. Major neck structures form during the fifth week of fetal development. During this time, five bands of tissue called pharyngeal arches form. These important structures contain tissues that’ll later become:

Several defects in the neck can occur when these arches fail to develop properly.

In branchial cleft cysts, the tissues that form the throat and neck don’t develop normally, creating open spaces called cleft sinuses on one or both sides of your child’s neck. A cyst may develop from fluids that are drained by these sinuses. In some cases, the cyst or sinus may become infected.

Symptoms of Branchial Cleft Cyst

Branchial cleft cyst mostly does not cause any pain, except in cases when it gets infected. Some of the symptoms of a branchial cleft cyst include:

Branchial cleft cysts generally develop in late childhood or early adulthood as a solitary, painless mass which becomes infected, though it is not noticed earlier.

Complications of Branchial Cleft Cysts

Diagnosis of Branchial Cleft Cysts

Conditions that mimic this condition

Treatment and Medication

Medicine

No medications are usually needed. If the cyst, sinus or fistula is infected, medicines (antibiotics) are given to control infection.

Surgery

Removal of the cyst, fistula or sinus is the treatment of choice.

Preoperative preparation

Patients are usually asked to shower or bathe on the night before surgery. Patients are asked to stop eating or drinking for a few hours before surgery.

Postoperative care

Depending on the extent of the surgery, the patient goes home on the same day of the operation or stays in the hospital overnight.

Risks/benefits

Home Care

Prognosis

Patients and families should be educated that branchial cleft cysts are typically benign, and with treatment, patients generally recover without complications or recurrence.

Exit mobile version