| Literature DB >> 26928524 |
Enrico Tedeschi1, Lorenzo Ugga2, Ferdinando Caranci3, Francesca Califano4, Sirio Cocozza5, Giacomo Lus4, Arturo Brunetti6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Orbital inflammatory pseudotumor is a rare inflammatory condition of unknown cause that may extend intracranially, usually as a dural-based infiltrate. Here we report the first case of orbital pseudotumor presenting with intra-axial Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) changes. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26928524 PMCID: PMC4772364 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-016-0550-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Previously reported cases of orbital pseudotumor with intracranial extension
| Year | Author | Patient age (years) | Gender | Intracranial location/features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1984 | Kaye et al. | 71 | M | ACF (planum sphenoidale), dural-based |
| 1986 | Frohman et al. | 48 | M | SOF, optic canal, bone erosion |
| 48 | F | MCF/CS, bone erosion | ||
| 72 | M | SOF, bone erosion | ||
| 1986 | Noble et al. | 46 | F | ACF, dural thickening |
| 1992 | Clifton et al. | 49 | M | MCF/CS, pattern II |
| 69 | M | SOF, pattern I | ||
| 54 | F | MCF/CS, pattern II | ||
| 36 | M | MCF, pattern I | ||
| 86 | M | MCF/CS, dural thickening, bilateral involvement, pattern III | ||
| 71 | F | MCF/CS, pattern II | ||
| 30 | M | MCF/CS, dural thickening, pattern III | ||
| 61 | M | MCF/CS, pattern II | ||
| 1993 | Bencherif et al. | 23 | M | CS, SOF, left fronto-temporal dural thickening, sphenoid bone sclerosis |
| 1993 | Olmos et al. | 64 | F | CS/Meckel cave, parasellar plaque, dural surface down to clivus and C2 body |
| 1996 | de Jesus et al. | 16 | F | Optic canal, SOF, MCF; dural thickening of the left hemisphere and tentorium |
| 1998 | Soares et al. | - | - | Pituitary fossa/CS, ICA compression |
| 2000 | Ayala et al. | 83 | F | ACF extra-axial mass without bone involvement, (possibly through the anterior etmoid foramen) |
| 2004 | Mahr et al. | 40 | M | MCF, dural thickening over the temporal pole |
| 41 | M | Optic canal, MCF paraclinoid mass | ||
| 73 | F | Meckel cave/CS | ||
| 2005 | Lee et al. | 58 | M | MCF/CS, dural thickening; ICA encasement |
| 63 | M | SOF | ||
| 55 | M | MCF/CS, petrous apex, dural thickening; brain edema; ICA encasement | ||
| 32 | M | MCF/CS dural thickening; brain edema | ||
| 46 | M | MCF/CS, petrous apex, Meckel cave, dural thickening; brain edema; ICA encasement | ||
| 2006 | Zborowska et al. | 45 | F | MCF/CS, Meckel cave, dural thickening over the temporal pole |
| 32 | M | MCF/CS, pituitary fossa, tentorium; bone erosion (sphenoid wing and orbital roof) | ||
| 48 | F | MCF/CS; parasellar mass, bone erosion, ICA encasement | ||
| 2011 | Saifudheen et al. | 50 | M | MCF/CS large dural mass (temporal pole); brain edema |
ACF Anterior cranial fossa, MCF Middle cranial fossa, CS Cavernous sinus, SOF Superior orbital fissure, ICA Internal carotid artery, Pattern I, II, III: patterns of intracranial extension of orbital pseudotumor as described by Clifton et al. [17]
Fig. 1Orbital and extraorbital involvement before and after steroid therapy. Upper row: coronal STIR (a, b) and axial FLAIR (c) MR images before treatment. Lower row: coronal STIR (d, e) and axial FLAIR (F) MR follow-up images after steroid therapy. Evidence of marked enlargement and edema involving the lateral rectus muscle in the right orbit, with infiltration of the contiguous fat (a), and the temporal and pterygoid muscles in the ipsilateral masticator space (b), all showing complete regression at follow-up (d, e). The massive vasogenic edema of the anterior portion of the temporal lobe evident in the initial MR scan (c), also shows dramatic reduction at follow-up (f)
Fig. 2Early and delayed intracranial enhancement in the acute phase. Axial CE T1w MR images before treatment at the level of the middle cranial fossa obtained 5 min (a) and 1 h (b) after iv administration of Gadolinium. Substantial thickening and intense enhancement of the dura mater adjacent to the right sphenoid wing can be appreciated (a), as well as involvement of the sub-cortical white matter of the temporal pole, that increases in the delayed phase (b). The temporal muscle also appears markedly enlarged and intensely enhancing compared to the contralateral one
Fig. 3Intracranial enhancement before and after steroid therapy. Coronal (a, c) and sagittal (b, d) CE T1w MR images before (upper row) and after (lower row) steroid therapy. In the follow-up phase, CE-MRI (C-D) shows striking improvement of the dural thickening and complete regression of the intra-axial enhancement