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Paraganglioma of head and neck

MedGen UID:
232588
Concept ID:
C1333944
Neoplastic Process
Synonym: Paragangliomas, head and neck
 
HPO: HP:0002864
Monarch Initiative: MONDO:0006239

Definition

A paraganglioma arising from paraganglia in the head and neck. Representative examples include the carotid body and jugulotympanic paragangliomas. [from NCI]

Conditions with this feature

Paragangliomas 4
MedGen UID:
349380
Concept ID:
C1861848
Neoplastic Process
Hereditary paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma (PGL/PCC) syndromes are characterized by paragangliomas (tumors that arise from neuroendocrine tissues distributed along the paravertebral axis from the base of the skull to the pelvis) and pheochromocytomas (paragangliomas that are confined to the adrenal medulla). Sympathetic paragangliomas cause catecholamine excess; parasympathetic paragangliomas are most often nonsecretory. Extra-adrenal parasympathetic paragangliomas are located predominantly in the skull base and neck (referred to as head and neck PGL [HNPGL]) and sometimes in the upper mediastinum; approximately 95% of such tumors are nonsecretory. In contrast, sympathetic extra-adrenal paragangliomas are generally confined to the lower mediastinum, abdomen, and pelvis, and are typically secretory. Pheochromocytomas, which arise from the adrenal medulla, typically lead to catecholamine excess. Symptoms of PGL/PCC result from either mass effects or catecholamine hypersecretion (e.g., sustained or paroxysmal elevations in blood pressure, headache, episodic profuse sweating, forceful palpitations, pallor, and apprehension or anxiety). The risk for developing metastatic disease is greater for extra-adrenal sympathetic paragangliomas than for pheochromocytomas.
Paragangliomas 1
MedGen UID:
488134
Concept ID:
C3494181
Neoplastic Process
Hereditary paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma (PGL/PCC) syndromes are characterized by paragangliomas (tumors that arise from neuroendocrine tissues distributed along the paravertebral axis from the base of the skull to the pelvis) and pheochromocytomas (paragangliomas that are confined to the adrenal medulla). Sympathetic paragangliomas cause catecholamine excess; parasympathetic paragangliomas are most often nonsecretory. Extra-adrenal parasympathetic paragangliomas are located predominantly in the skull base and neck (referred to as head and neck PGL [HNPGL]) and sometimes in the upper mediastinum; approximately 95% of such tumors are nonsecretory. In contrast, sympathetic extra-adrenal paragangliomas are generally confined to the lower mediastinum, abdomen, and pelvis, and are typically secretory. Pheochromocytomas, which arise from the adrenal medulla, typically lead to catecholamine excess. Symptoms of PGL/PCC result from either mass effects or catecholamine hypersecretion (e.g., sustained or paroxysmal elevations in blood pressure, headache, episodic profuse sweating, forceful palpitations, pallor, and apprehension or anxiety). The risk for developing metastatic disease is greater for extra-adrenal sympathetic paragangliomas than for pheochromocytomas.

Professional guidelines

PubMed

Carillo AM, Franca RA, Modica R, De Caro MDB, Pisapia P, Vigliar E, Troncone G, Bellevicine C
Cytopathology 2023 Jan;34(1):87-90. Epub 2022 Oct 17 doi: 10.1111/cyt.13185. PMID: 36181237Free PMC Article
Jansen TTG, Timmers HJLM, Marres HAM, Kunst HPM
Head Neck 2017 Oct;39(10):2088-2094. Epub 2017 Jul 10 doi: 10.1002/hed.24871. PMID: 28691354

Recent clinical studies

Etiology

Neumann HP, Sullivan M, Winter A, Malinoc A, Hoffmann MM, Boedeker CC, Bertz H, Walz MK, Moeller LC, Schmid KW, Eng C
J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2011 Aug;96(8):E1279-82. Epub 2011 May 25 doi: 10.1210/jc.2011-0114. PMID: 21613359

Diagnosis

Tănăsescu MD, Popescu Ș, Mincă A, Isac T, Suliman E, Grigorie MM, Suliman E, Stăniloaie D, Timofte D, Ionescu D
Medicina (Kaunas) 2023 Oct 30;59(11) doi: 10.3390/medicina59111925. PMID: 38003974Free PMC Article

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