GRAND ROUNDS
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Transcript GRAND ROUNDS
GRAND ROUNDS
Desirée Ong, M.D.
Vanderbilt Eye Institute
June 28, 2007
Our Patient
CC: “My appearance has changed”
HPI: 57 yo F
Left eye has progressively “pulled outward”
Binocular diplopia x 3 yrs
Lashes rub against her sunglasses
Students said they did not know who she was looking at
History
POHX:
PMHX:
Narrow-angle glaucoma OU s/p LPI OU
Eye muscle surgery x 3 within last two years
Revision of lower eyelid OS for post-surgical scarring
Hypothyroid
Arthritis
Depression
Concussion x 2
FHx: Daughter has strabismus
History
Social Hx:
Meds:
Married with grown children
No tobacco or ETOH
8th grade teacher
Wellbutrin
Synthroid
Hormone replacement therapy
Alphagan BID OU
Allergies: Darvocet
Exam
BCVA: OD 20/15, OS 20/25-2
CVF: full OU
Ishihara: 15/15 OU
Hertel: 7 mm of proptosis OS
Pupils: 32mm OU, no RAPD
Motility
Exam
L/L: quiet OD, inferior symblepharon OS
S/C: quiet OU
K: quiet OD, PEE OS
A/C: narrow angles OU
Iris: patent superior LPI OU
Lens: 1+ NSC OU
Ant vitreous: quiet OU
Differential Diagnosis?
Proptosis with extraocular motility limitation
Differential Diagnosis
Proptosis with extraocular motility limitation
Neoplastic
Sphenoid wing meningioma
Lacrimal gland tumor
Schwannoma
Mucocele
Nasopharyngeal tumor
Dermoid cyst
Metastasis
Solitary fibrous tumor
Fibrous histiocytoma
Hemangiopericytoma
Lymphoproliferative
Neurofibroma
Leiomyoma
Glioma
Differential Diagnosis
Proptosis with extraocular motility limitation
Autoimmune
Inflammatory
Cavernous hemangioma
Varix
A-V fistula
Infectious
Pseudotumor
Sarcoid granuloma
Vascular
TED – 60% of all orbital disease
Orbital cellulitis
Tuberculosis granuloma
Trauma
Retrobulbar hematoma
What is next?
Imaging: MRI
T1: isointense to brain
T2: hyperintense to brain, isointense to CSF
Marked enhancement on T1 with gadolinium
“Peripheral
ring”
Cavitary change or heterogeneity
Our Patient
Excisional biopsy
Underwent anterior orbitotomy with image-guided
excision of a well-encapsulated mass 4/20/07
Gross Pathology
Yellow-tan lesion with
varicose vessels on the
surface
Cone-shaped > dumbbell
> oval > round
True capsule composed of
perineurium
Eccentric position within
capsule
Wt. 3.58 g, dimensions: 3.4 x 2 x 1.4 cm
Pathology
Verocay bodies: dense whorls
Antoni A pattern: compact palisading nuclei
Pathology
Pathology
Antoni B pattern: ovoid clear cells, loose pattern of myxoid
stromal degeneration, cystic spaces
Pathology
Most common pattern: mixed
Antoni A and B (47%)
No axons present within the
substance of the tumor
Fibrosis and hyalinization around
blood vessels, vessel walls contain
xanthoma cells
Luse bodies: cytoplasmic collagen fibrils
upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/...
“Ancient” lesions can have
calcification, cystic changes
‘Ancient’
http://www.histopathology-india.net/Schwannoma.htm
Immunohistochemistry
S-100 positive
Vimentin positive
Leu7 positive
Diffuse S-100 positivity
http://www.emedicine.com/derm/topic285.htm
Progesterone-receptor positive
May account for increased proptosis during pregnancy
Possible place for hormonal tx
Diagnosis
Orbital Schwannoma
Schwannoma
(Neurilemoma)
Benign tumor of Schwann cell sheaths of
peripheral sensory nerves
First described by Verocay in 1910
Well-defined, slowly progressive and noninvasive with low malignant potential
Schwannoma
No racial predilection
Female predominance
2nd to 5th decades (mean: 40 yrs)
18% associated with neurofibromatosis
Schwannoma
55% of all peripheral nerve tumors
Predilection for the head/neck, flexor surfaces of
extremities
Solitary except for in NF-1 or 2
Orbital Schwannoma
1-2% of orbital tumors
Extraconal > intraconal
Superior > medial superior > apex
Orbital Schwannoma
Most common: sensory branches of CN V1
(supratrochlear/supraorbital)
Rarely from motor nerves: CN III (superior division,
ciliary nerve), CN VI
Optic nerve never involved since an extension of the CNS
Rarely intramuscular, epibulbar or intraosseus
Symptoms
Initially asymptomatic
Diplopia
Headache
Decreased vision
Direct optic nerve compression
Induced hyperopia
Numbness or pain in distribution of involved nerve –
rare unless large tumor
Signs
Proptosis – most common
Lid swelling
Restricted ocular motility
Globe displacement
Afferent pupillary defect
Choroidal folds
http://content.lib.utah.edu/cgi-bin/showfile.exe?CISOROOT=/EHSL-WFH&CISOPTR=174
Optic atrophy/disc edema
Diagnosis and Management
MRI with/without contrast: imaging method of
choice
Observation vs excision
Radiation
Evaluation for NF with bilateral vestibular
schwannomas and age < 30
Surgical approach
Governed by location of tumor within the orbit
Complete removal is recommended
Aspiration or piecemeal excision
Small risk of recurrence with incomplete removal
One reported case of recurrence and malignant transformation
after incomplete excision in a pt with neurofibromatosis
May strip tumor from nerve of origin via microsurgical
technique
Our Patient at Follow-Up (6/19/07)
Pt still complains of diplopia in primary gaze
Motility:
Plan: strabismus surgery to improve her diplopia
Teaching points
Early diagnosis and accurate evaluation of the
extent of an orbital schwannoma is critical for
restoration of vision and preserving extraocular
eye movements
Complete excision, if possible, is recommended
to prevent recurrence and malignant
transformation
References
Chang BY, Moriarty P, Cunniffe G, Barnes C, Kennedy S. Accelerated growth of a
primary orbital schwannoma during pregnancy. Eye. 2003 Oct;17(7):839-41.
Cockerham KP, Cockerham GC, Stutzman R et al. The clinical spectrum of schwannomas
presenting with visual dysfunction: a clinicopathologic study of three cases. Surv
Ophthalmol. 1999 Nov-Dec;44(3):226-34.
Gunduz K, Shields CL, Gunalp I, Erden E, Shields JA. Correlation of magnetic
resonance imaging and pathologic findings. Graefe’s Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2003;
241: 593-597.
Rawlings NG, Brownstein S, Robinson JW, Jordan DR. Orbital schwannoma:
histopathologic correlation with magnetic resonance imaging. Can J Ophthalmol. 2007
Apr;42(2):326-8.
Rootman J. Diseases of the Orbit. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1988: 319325.
Shields JA, Shields, CL. Atlas of Orbital Tumors. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams and
Wilkins, 1999: 76-78.
Wang Y, Xiao LH. Orbital schwannomas: findings from magnetic resonance imaging in 62
cases. Eye. 2007 Apr 20; epublication.