Definition

The mediastinum is the median partition of the thoracic cavity, covered by the mediastinal part of the parietal pleura and containing all thoracic viscera and structures except the lungs.

Boundaries

Boundaries of the mediastinum
AnteriorSternum
PosteriorVertebral column
LateralMediastinal pleura (on each side)
SuperiorThoracic inlet
InferiorDiaphragm

Classification schemes

Three classification systems are in common use. Knowing all three matters — examiners use them interchangeably and radiologists use Felson's, surgeons use Gray's, and oncologists now use ITMIG.

Gray's four-compartment model

The classical anatomical model divides the mediastinum into a superior compartment and three inferior compartments.

  • Superior mediastinum: thoracic inlet to the thoracic plane (line from sternal angle of Louis to T4/5 disc)
  • Inferior mediastinum: thoracic plane to diaphragm — divided into anterior, middle, and posterior
Contents of mediastinum — Gray's four-compartment model
CompartmentKey contents
SuperiorAortic arch and branches · SVC and innominate vein · vagus, phrenic, left RLN · thoracic duct · thymus · trachea · oesophagus · lymph nodes
Anterior inferiorThymus (remnant) · lymph nodes · fat
Middle inferiorHeart and pericardium · great vessels · phrenic nerve and pericardiophrenic vessels
Posterior inferiorDescending aorta · azygos vein · thoracic duct · oesophagus · sympathetic ganglia · vagus nerve · lymph nodes

Felson's three-compartment model

Used by radiologists. The superior and anterior compartments of Gray's model are combined into a single anterosuperior compartment. Three zones are identified on the lateral chest radiograph:

  • Anterior (anterosuperior): anterior to a line along the posterior border of the heart and trachea — thymus, lymph nodes, fat, intrathoracic goitre, germ cell tumours
  • Middle: between the anterior border and a line 1 cm posterior to the anterior margin of the vertebral bodies — heart, pericardium, trachea, oesophagus, thoracic duct
  • Posterior: posterior to that line — neurogenic tumours, descending aorta, sympathetic chain, vertebral column
Clinical pearl — Felson's rule of compartments

The location of a mediastinal mass on lateral CXR predicts the most likely diagnosis: anterior masses = thymic/GCT/lymphoma/goitre; middle masses = foregut cysts/lymphoma/vascular; posterior masses = neurogenic tumours. Not absolute, but a powerful first filter.

ITMIG classification

The International Thymic Malignancy Interest Group (ITMIG) classification uses cross-sectional imaging (CT) rather than plain radiograph geometry. It is now accepted as the standard for mediastinal tumour staging and research.

ITMIG classification of mediastinal compartments
CompartmentBoundariesKey contents
Prevascular (anterior)Anterior — sternum
Posterior — anterior aspect of pericardium
Thymus · fat · lymph nodes · left brachiocephalic vein
Visceral (middle)Anterior — posterior pericardium
Posterior — 1 cm anterior to vertebral body margin (visceral–paravertebral line)
Heart and great vessels · trachea and carina · oesophagus · thoracic duct · lymph nodes
Paravertebral (posterior)Anterior — visceral–paravertebral line
Posterolateral — posterior chest wall
Thoracic spine · paravertebral soft tissues · sympathetic chain

All three compartments are bounded superiorly by the thoracic inlet and inferiorly by the diaphragm.

Surgical access to the mediastinum

Median sternotomy

Standard approach for anterior and superior mediastinal pathology — thymectomy, anterior mediastinal tumours, cardiac surgery.

Posterolateral thoracotomy

For posterior mediastinal tumours — neurogenic, oesophageal, descending aorta.

Cervical mediastinoscopy

Staging of superior and middle mediastinal nodes (stations 2, 4, 7). Standard approach for lymph node biopsy and mediastinal staging.

Anterior mediastinotomy (Chamberlain)

Left 2nd interspace parasternal approach. Accesses aortopulmonary window nodes (stations 5, 6) — left-sided tumours.

VATS

Posterior mediastinal tumours, sympathectomy, pleural biopsy, lung biopsy. Increasingly used for thymectomy.

Robot-assisted

Thymectomy, posterior mediastinal tumour resection — growing evidence base; excellent visualisation in confined space.

Further reading

All clinical content should be verified against current guidelines before clinical application. This resource is intended for revision and educational purposes only.

Standard textbooks

  • Shields TW, LoCicero J, Reed CE, Feins RH. General Thoracic Surgery. 7th ed. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
  • Sellke FW, del Nido PJ, Swanson SJ. Sabiston & Spencer Surgery of the Chest. 9th ed. Elsevier.
  • Pearson FG, et al. Thoracic Surgery. 3rd ed. Churchill Livingstone.

Current guidelines & resources