Disease Spectrum of Cervical Lymphadenopathy in adults
Rabia Amin Butt, Zonaira Rathore, Afia Sarwar, Faiza Azam, Faria Waqar Khan, Maryam Nisar
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ABSTRACT
Aim: To determine
the frequency of different diseases resulting in cervical lymphadenopathy in
specimens of patients presenting in tertiary care hospital.
Methodology: It was a cross sectional study conducted at the histopathology section
of the pathology department of Services Institute of Medical Sciences/Services
Hospital Lahore. The study was approved by the ethical committee of the institution.
The study was completed in six months.100 cases fulfilling the inclusion criteria
were registered. Inclusion criteria included patients above 16 years of age,
patients from both sexes, unilateral or bilateral irrespective of duration. Lymph
nodes less than 1cm were not included in the study. Informed consent was taken.
Both FNAC and Biopsy were used as diagnostic tools. All the data was analysed
with SPSS version 11.
Results: During
a period of six months, a total of 100 cases of cervical lymphadenopathy were studied.
These included 75 benign and 25 malignant cases. Out of benign cases 53% were
diagnosed as tuberculous lymphadenitis. About 81.3% were in the age range of
16-25 years and 18.7% were in the age range of 26-35 years. 22% cases were
diagnosed as reactive lymphadenitis. About 54.54% of these patients were in the
age range of 16-25 years and 45.46% were in the age range of 26-35 years. The
highest frequency among malignant lesions consisted of Non-Hodgkin lymphoma 16%
followed by Hodgkin lymphoma 5% and metastatic disease 4%.The age range of
malignant lesions was in the range of 36-78 years.
Conclusion: Our study concludes that cervical lymphadenopathy is the common clinical presentation in our
setup and tuberculosis is the commonest cause.
Keywords: Hodgkin lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin lymphoma, Fine needle
aspiration cytology