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Observational Study
Evaluation of age-related thymic changes using computed tomography images: A retrospective observational study.
- Kosuke Suzuki, Akihiko Kitami, Momoka Okada, Shinnosuke Takamiya, Shinichi Ohashi, Yoko Tanaka, Syugo Uematsu, Mitsutaka Kadokura, Takashi Suzuki, Norihiro Hashizume, and Hidefumi Fujisawa.
- Respiratory Disease Center, Showa University Northern Yokohama Hospital, Yokohama, Japan.
- Medicine (Baltimore). 2022 Aug 12; 101 (32): e29950e29950.
AbstractWe aimed to investigate if Computed tomography (CT) attenuation values can help improve the identification of age-related changes in the thymus. We assessed CT images of 405 patients aged 0 to 80 years. We measured the area of the anterior mediastinum at the level of the carina and its average CT attenuation value. We evaluated the thymic area, the ratio of the thymus area to the total thoracic area, and the CT attenuation value. Additionally, we evaluated changes in the thymus area in the 0 to 13-year age group. The area of the thymus decreased from birth to the middle 20s. After the middle 20s, the area tended to increase and plateau till after 50 years of age. The ratio of the thymic area to the thoracic area decreased from age 0 to 20 years, but remained stable after 20 years of age. The CT attenuation values were stable from birth to puberty, decreased after puberty, and were stable again in the late 50s and beyond. The thymus of children showed mass formation, but the shape changed with age. No significant differences in the CT attenuation value were found across underlying conditions for the 0 to 13-year age group. The decrease in the CT attenuation values, observed with advancing age, reflects adipose degeneration of the thymus, indicating that by the late 50s, thymic tissue is replaced completely by adipose tissue. Our data suggest that adipose degeneration of the thymus begins after puberty and advances with age.Copyright © 2022 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.
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