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Dr. CCHMC Pediatric Surgery

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Mesenteric and Omental Cysts

Video Published 2020-05-01 Updated 2025-10-16

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Topic Overview

Educational overview of mesenteric and omental cysts in pediatric patients, covering etiology, clinical presentation, diagnostic workup, and management strategies. Discusses differentiation between macrocytic and microcytic lesions, role of sclerotherapy versus surgical resection, and differential diagnosis of pediatric abdominal masses.

Key Takeaways

  • Mesenteric cysts are rare but 60% present by age 15; most arise from benign lymphatic proliferation in the mesentery without systemic drainage.
  • Ultrasound is first-line imaging; macrocystic lesions may respond to aspiration/sclerotherapy while microcystic lesions often require sirolimus therapy.
  • Symptomatic presentation includes abdominal distension, pain from hemorrhage/torsion, or bowel obstruction—40-60% of children are symptomatic at diagnosis.
  • Complete surgical excision is definitive treatment when sclerotherapy fails; wait 3 months post-sclerotherapy to allow inflammation to resolve before resection.
  • Differential includes enteric duplication, ovarian/paratubal cysts, choledochal cysts, and pancreatic/splenic lesions—cross-sectional imaging helps differentiate.

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