| Literature DB >> 24761144 |
Shingo Konno1, Wataru Hagiwara1, Miyuki Sasaki1, Akihisa Fuse1, Tomomi Imamura1, Masashi Inoue1, Hisao Kitazono1, Toshiki Fujioka1.
Abstract
A 69-year-old woman presented with generalized myasthenia gravis and a left orbital cavernous hemangioma (OCH), which elevated the optic nerve and displaced the external eye muscles. Cyclosporine treatment induced a gradual size reduction in the OCH, and consequently contributed to improved external ocular symptoms in combination with immunosuppressant effects.Entities:
Keywords: Cyclosporine; External ocular symptoms; Myasthenia gravis; Orbital cavernous hemangioma
Year: 2014 PMID: 24761144 PMCID: PMC3995389 DOI: 10.1159/000362117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Neurol ISSN: 1662-680X
Fig. 1Orbital MRI. a, b The MRI was performed when the patient was hospitalized for the first time after PP treatment. a A short T1 inversion recovery axial image with contrast enhancement at the first examination is presented. Well-enhanced masses, 3 cm in diameter, in the left orbit are shown. b T1-weighted coronal image. The mass lifted the optic nerve diagonally forward and right and displaced the inferior rectus muscle inferiorly. A high-intensity lesion was shown in the inferior rectus muscle. c, d The MRI was performed 7 years after the initial visit. T1-weighted axial and coronal images without contrast enhancement. The mass volume decreased in size and the optic nerve returned to its normal position. The intramuscular high-intensity area regressed.