| Literature DB >> 24939368 |
Maria Giuseppina Cefalo, Giovanna Stefania Colafati, Antonino Romanzo, Alessandra Modugno, Rita De Vito, Angela Mastronuzzi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Congenital cystic eye is an exceedingly rare ocular malformative disease, originated from the failure in the invagination of the optic vesicle during the fetal period and it can be associated with other ocular and non-ocular abnormalities. Diagnosis is based on clinical, radiological and histological features. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24939368 PMCID: PMC4074140 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2415-14-80
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
Figure 1Pre-operative (A-C) and post-operative (D-F )orbit MRI study. Coronal T2w images (A-B) show a complex mass in the upper-outer and anterior portions of the left orbit with a predominantly extraconal engagement. The mass consists of a well-defined anterior cystic component (white arrow) with signal intensity similar to vitreous/cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and a posterior component more hyperintense than the muscle signal. No normal orbital contents such as extra-ocular muscles or globe can be identified in the anterior portions of the orbit. Axial post-gadolinium fat saturated T1w image (C) shows heterogeneous enhancement of the posterior soft tissue mass. No normal orbital contents such as extraocular muscles or globe can be identified in the anterior portions of the orbit. Notice the bone defect of the lateral wall of the orbit (A, arrowhead) and the left optic nerve atrophy (C, arrowhead). Post-operative Coronal T2w MRI images (D-E) disclose a partial reduction of the complex mass in the left orbit; following gadolinium administration, the residual lesion shows a dyshomogeneous enhancement (axial post-gadolinium fat saturated T1w image, F); notice the presence of a left ocular prosthesis (F, white arrow).
Figure 2Histopathological characterization. A-D. Hematoxylin-Eosin-Stained Histopathological Sections (original magnification x10): the cystic wall was formed by fragments of a fibrous tissue containing strands of pigmented retinal epithelium. Some islands of glial tissue composed by glial fibers intermixed with stellate astrocytes with moderate eosinophilic cytoplasm were also present. No cellular atypia, mitotic activity or necrosis was evident. No tissue from other germ cell layer was seen.
sEvolution of the cerebellar lesion on brain MRI study. Axial (A,D) and coronal (B,E) T2 weighted MRI;. Axial (C,F) post-contrast T1-weighted MRI: small pseudonodular lesion on the mesial side of the right cerebellar hemisphere. The lesion was hyperintense on T2-dependent sequences (A,B) and with mild enhancement after gadolinium administration (C). Follow-up MRI performed after 6-months revealed complete disappearance of the cerebellar lesion (D-E-F).