Peripheral Lymphadenopathy: Approach and Diagnostic Tools
Authors
Abstract:
Peripheral lymph nodes, located deep in the subcutaneous tissue, clean antigens from the extracellular fluid. Generally, a normal sized lymph node is less than one cm in diameter. Peripheral lymphadenopathy (LAP) is frequently due to a local or systemic, benign, self-limited, infectious disease. However, it could be a manifestation of underlying malignancy. Seventy-five percent of all LAPs are localized, with more than 50% being seen in the head and neck area. LAP may be localized or generalized. Cervical lymph nodes are involved more often than the other lymphatic regions. Generally, it is due to infections, but most of the supraclavicular lymphadenopathies are associated with malignancy. Based on different geographical areas, the etiology is various. For example, in tropical areas, tuberculosis (TB) is a main benign cause of LAP in adults and children. Complete history taking and physical examination are mandatory for diagnosis; however, laboratory tests, imaging diagnostic methods, and tissue samplings are the next steps. Tissue diagnosis by fine needle aspiration biopsy or excisional biopsy is the gold standard evaluation for LAP. We concluded that in patients with peripheral LAP, the patient’s age and environmental exposures along with a careful history taking and physical examination can help the physician to request step by step further work-up when required, including laboratory tests, imaging modalities, and tissue diagnosis, to reach an appropriate diagnosis.
similar resources
peripheral lymphadenopathy: approach and diagnostic tools
peripheral lymph nodes, located deep in the subcutaneous tissue, clean antigens from the extracellular fluid. generally, a normal sized lymph node is less than one cm in diameter. peripheral lymphadenopathy (lap) is frequently due to a local or systemic, benign, self-limited, infectious disease. however, it could be a manifestation of underlying malignancy. seventy-five percent of all laps are ...
full textPeripheral lymphadenopathy in Nigeria.
A review was carried out on the histopathological diagnosis of peripheral lymph node biopsies processed and reported within a period of 18 years (1979-1996) in the Department of Pathology of University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, Ilorin, Nigeria. A total of 751 cases from 468 male and 283 female patients within the age range of 1 year to 80 years were reviewed. Non-neoplastic lesions made up 5...
full textPeripheral lymphadenopathy in Nigerian adults.
OBJECTIVE To review the pathology of lymph node disorders in adults with primary peripheral lymphadenopathy. METHODS A 20-year (1985-2004) retrospective study of lymph node biopsies at the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, Benin City, Nigeria. RESULTS Of the 427 lymph node biopsy specimens received, 238 (55.7%) were from males and 189 (44.3%) from females. Localized lymphadenopathy was...
full textPeripheral lymphadenopathy in immunocompetent adults.
Although unexplained lymphadenopathies are not particular prevalent in the general population (<1%), they represent a diagnostic dilemma. The differential diagnosis is broad, and although only few diseases will be either severe or treatable, patients as well as their doctors are in fear of missing a relevant diagnosis such as a malignancy. For the differential diagnosis it is prudent to disting...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 39 issue March Supplement
pages 158- 170
publication date 2014-03-17
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023