Case report: Epidermoid cyst misdiagnosed as a loculated pericardial effusion

Abstract A 25-year old man presented with a mediastinal lesion which was initially diagnosed as a loculated pericardial collection on echocardiography. Subsequent imaging showed it to be a cystic mediastinal mass, and following surgery and histopathology, it turned out to be an epidermoid cyst.

vertebral anomaly was detected. The patient was taken up for immediate surgery, which revealed a large, tense, cystic mass in the anterosuperior mediastinum, att ached to the pericardium. It was resected intact. There was no evidence of any intraspinal extension or Þ brous connection with the thoracic spine. The cyst showed homogeneous contents and had a smooth wall. Histopathology revealed a Þ brous wall lined by stratiÞ ed squamous epithelium with laminated overlying keratin, consistent with a diagnosis of epidermoid cyst [ Figure 3]. The patient unfortunately succumbed to A mediastinal epidermoid cyst is extremely rare. It is characterized pathologically by keratinized epithelium that diff erentiates it from bronchoenteric, bronchopulmonary, and esophageal duplication cysts. [1] We report a patient with a large epidermoid cyst in the mediastinum that was mistaken for a loculated pericardial collection.

Case Report
A 25-year-old man presented to the emergency department with severe hypotension. There was a history of gradually progressive dyspnea over 6 months. Physical examination revealed engorged neck and chest wall veins and a swollen face. The jugular venous pressure was found to be raised, suggesting superior vena cava (SVC) compression. The frontal chest radiograph [ Figure 1] showed mediastinal widening that was predominantly in the superior part.
Echocardiography was performed and a diagnosis of a loculated pericardial eff usion on the right side of the heart was made; the heart had been displaced to the left and there was compression of the right atrium and ventricle. Pericardiocentesis yielded thick turbid fluid. CT scan of the chest showed a fluid-density cystic lesion with no enhancement; it was situated in the anterosuperior mediastinum and measured 183 × 132 × 154 mm in size. The lesion had displaced the heart to the left , with compression of the right atrium and ventricle; there was also encasement and compression of the major vessels, including the superior vena cava and its tributaries [
Esophageal duplication cysts appear as spherical or tubular masses in close proximity to the esophagus, sometimes adherent to the wall of the esophagus. They are usually homogeneous and exhibit water att enuation. [4,5] On CT, bronchogenic cysts appear as round or spherical, sharply marginated, homogeneous masses with water att enuation values in the majority of cases. [6] Increased CT att enuation may result from hemorrhage or proteinaceous debris within the lesion. [7] The diagnosis of an epidermoid cyst can reliably be made only on histopathology. A typical epidermoid cyst is lined with stratiÞ ed squamous epithelium that contains a granular layer and is Þ lled with keratinous material that oft en has a laminated arrangement.
Posterior epidermoid cysts should be considered in the diff erential diagnosis of intradural extramedullary lesions of the spinal cord. [3] However anterior mediastinal epidermoid cysts, as in the present case, are very rare and there is no