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Updated: Jun 22, 2026

Endoscopic Approach for Colloid Cyst Resection
02:30

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Published on: May 23, 2025

The rare third branchial cleft cyst.

M J Joshi1, M J Provenzano, R J H Smith

  • 1Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, Chicago, IL, USA.

AJNR. American Journal of Neuroradiology
|May 29, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Third branchial cleft cysts (BCCs) are rare developmental anomalies. This case highlights their characteristic imaging findings on CT and MRI, confirming surgical excision as the definitive treatment.

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Area of Science:

  • Medical Imaging
  • Surgical Pathology
  • Developmental Biology

Background:

  • Third branchial cleft cysts (BCCs) are uncommon congenital malformations arising from persistent embryonic branchial structures.
  • Understanding BCCs is crucial for accurate diagnosis and effective management in clinical practice.

Observation:

  • CT scans reveal BCCs as homogeneous, low-attenuation masses with distinct, well-defined borders.
  • MRI demonstrates variable signal intensity on T1-weighted sequences and hyperintensity relative to surrounding muscle tissue on T2-weighted sequences.

Findings:

  • The presented case illustrates typical radiological features of a third BCC.
  • Diagnostic imaging (CT and MRI) plays a key role in identifying these rare cysts.

Implications:

  • Accurate diagnosis of third BCCs through advanced imaging techniques facilitates timely surgical intervention.
  • Surgical excision remains the standard and definitive treatment for third branchial cleft cysts.