A 5-year-old female presented to the emergency department (ED) with a one-year history of gradually increasing anterior neck swelling. The patient had no significant past medical history. She also endorsed three weeks of cough and congestion, and one day of muffled voice. She denied difficulty swallowing, fatigue, cold intolerance, or hair and nail changes.
Vitals: BP 87/62; Pulse 80; Temp 36°C (96.8°F); Resp 21; SpO2 99%
Constitutional: No distress. Able to speak in full sentences
HEENT: Normocephalic and atraumatic. Right Ear: External ear normal. Left Ear: External ear normal. Congestion present. Mucous membranes are moist. Tonsils 4+ bilaterally with no exudate.
Neck: Approximately 3 cm x 4 cm mass on the anterior neck that does not move on protrusion of the tongue. Mass is midline and inferior to the laryngeal prominence. No associated erythema, tenderness to palpation, or drainage. No enlarged surrounding lymph nodes on palpation.
Cardiovascular: Normal rate, regular rhythm, and normal heart sounds.
Pulmonary: Breath sounds normal, no stridor, no respiratory distress, no decreased breath sounds, and no wheezes.
Abdominal: Soft. No distention or tenderness.
Neurological: Alert and normal muscle tone.
Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH): > 100 (ref 0.50 – 4.50 MCU/ML).
Free T4: 0.5 (ref 0.8-2.0 NG/DL)
Ultrasound of the neck revealed an enlarged thyroid gland with lobular contours and diffuse hypoechoic echogenicity, without noticeable nodules, fluid collection, or lymphadenopathy.
Differential diagnosis of a neck mass in a pediatric patient includes branchial cleft cyst, thyroglossal duct cyst, cystic hygroma, laryngocele, dermoid cyst, teratoma, thymic cyst, hemangioma, ranula (mucocele), thyroid mass, enlarged lymph node, lymphoma, rhabdomycosarcoma, neuroblastoma, and melanoma [1]. When evaluating a neck mass, reviewing whether the mass is congenital vs acquired and midline vs lateral will help with narrowing down the differential diagnosis. The photo reveals a prominent anterior lower neck mass with the outline of right lobe of the thyroid gland clearly visible.
The patient was diagnosed with hypothyroidism with goiter, likely Hashimoto’s thyroiditis. She was discharged from the ED on levothyroxine 25 mcg daily with endocrinology outpatient follow-up. Levothyroxine monotherapy is the standard of care in hypothyroidism management [2]. Thyroid peroxidase and thyroglobulin antibodies were found to be positive on subsequent labwork, which confirmed diagnosis.
Take-Home Points
- Enlarged goiter in the setting of hypothyroidism should be considered in a pediatric patient with a midline lower neck mass.
- When suspecting hypothyroidism, thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) and free T4 should be included in the evaluation. An ultrasound and thyroid antibodies may also be helpful to confirm diagnosis.
- Geddes G, Butterly MM, Patel SM, Marra S. Pediatric neck masses. Pediatr Rev. 2013 Mar;34(3):115-24; quiz 125. doi: 10.1542/pir.34-3-115. PMID: 23457198.
- Jonklaas J, Bianco AC, Bauer AJ, Burman KD, Cappola AR, Celi FS, Cooper DS, Kim BW, Peeters RP, Rosenthal MS, Sawka AM; American Thyroid Association Task Force on Thyroid Hormone Replacement. Guidelines for the treatment of hypothyroidism: prepared by the american thyroid association task force on thyroid hormone replacement. Thyroid. 2014 Dec;24(12):1670-751. doi: 10.1089/thy.2014.0028. PMID: 25266247; PMCID: PMC4267409.
Copyright
Images and cases from the Society of Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) Clinical Images Exhibit at the 2023 SAEM Annual Meeting | Copyrighted by SAEM 2023 – all rights reserved. View other cases from this Clinical Image Series on ALiEM.
Felicia Cooper, MD
Nemours Children's Health
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Shilpa Gurnurkar, MD
Pediatric Endocrinology Fellowship Director
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