Schwannomas are benign neoplasms of the myelin-producing Schwann's cells which are always slow growing and affect sensory nerves7. Extracranial hypoglossal nerve schwannomas are exceedingly rare and have a greater preponderance among women8-10. The case in this study have similar characteristics with the previous studies.
Extracranial hypoglossal nerve schwannomas often present as a solitary, painless neck mass in the neck11. Most of the patients commonly have tongue deviation and speech disturbance, but small portion of the patients presented without any neurological symptoms10. In this study, the patient didn’t have the history of the tongue deviation.
According to history the pain of patient, we speculated that the patient was submandibular lymphandenitis in priority. However, negative findings on CBCT reduced the possibility of submandibular lymphandenitis.
MRI played an key role in preoperative diagnosis of the tumor and was the most frequently used imaging modality10. Hypoglossal nerve schwannomas exhibit hypointense or isointense on T1, hyperintense on T2, with heterogeneous enhancement on contrast-enhanced studies4, 12, 13. That was consistent with the findings presented in our study. The location of the lesion was deep and tightly close to the igastric intermediate tendon. Pleomorphic adenomas, which frequently present in the submandibular gland, have similar MRI image with Hypoglossal nerve schwannomas14. This suggested that the MRI findings of hypoglossal nerve schwannomas were not specific15. The patient was diagnosed preoperatively as a submandibular gland tumor base on the symptom and MRI findings.
Surgical treatment is universally accepted for submandibular gland tumor and the hypoglossal schwannoma. During the operation, we found that the mass separated from submandibular gland and located in hypoglossal nerve. Then, the tumor was excised with preservation of hypoglossal nerve and submandibular gland. Due to the limit reports, the outcomes in nerve preservation versus sacrifice during surgical resection were uncertain,but the overall outcomes in both are favorable10. If the hypoglossal schwannoma was identified preoperatively, the smaller surgical incision could be performed for only dissecting hypoglossal nerve and tumor. The diagnosis was confirmed as a hypoglossal schwannoma histopathologically by the presence of Antoni A fibers, which are narrow elongated bipolar cells, and Antoni B fibers, which are less organized and distributed cells2, 6. Microscopically, in this case, it contained a mixture of Antoni A fibers and Antoni B cells.