Thymus uptake on whole-body iodine scintigraphy (I-131)

Case contributed by Kevin Banks
Diagnosis almost certain

Presentation

History of thyroidectomy for high-risk papillary thyroid cancer 2 months prior. Underwent adjuvant therapy with 149 mCi of I-131 and presents 5 days after for diagnostic whole-body scan.

Patient Data

Age: 16 years
Gender: Female

Whole-body I-131 scintigraphy

Nuclear medicine

Whole-body planar images show increased radiotracer activity in the midline neck and mediastinum. Physiologic activity noted in the transverse and descending colon as well as bladder and nasal/oral cavity. No osseous or pulmonary radiotracer activity.

SPECT-CT demonstrates focal intense activity in the anterior midline infrahyoid neck compatible with occult residual thyroid tissue and/or thyroglossal duct cyst. Additionally, moderate diffuse radioactive iodine uptake in the anterior-superior mediastinum is present. This demonstrates an inverted v-shaped configuration typical of the thymus. On CT, the thymus shows normal anatomic appearance.

Case Discussion

While relatively rare, diffuse uptake of radioactive iodine by the thymus is a well reported normal variant. It is typically seen in younger individuals (such as in this case) as a sail or an inverted-v shape in the anterior superior mediastinum. It is believed that the iodine accumulates in the Hassall bodies of the thymus due to their similarity to thyroid follicles. If necessary, SPECT/CT imaging can be useful to confirm and exclude mediastinal lymph node metastases.

How to use cases

You can use Radiopaedia cases in a variety of ways to help you learn and teach.

Creating your own cases is easy.

Updating… Please wait.

 Unable to process the form. Check for errors and try again.

 Thank you for updating your details.