| Literature DB >> 28097083 |
Nicole Spitzer1, Naazli Shaikh1, Leah Strickland2, Son Ho3.
Abstract
This paper describes two patients with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the periocular and periorbital skin who presented with trigeminal neuralgia. Both patients had previous cutaneous SCC of the scalp treated successfully with surgical resection but later presented with neuro-ophthalmic findings suggesting perineural invasion (PNI) of SCC. PNI of SCC in the periocular skin or orbit can lead to devastating effects if malignant cells seed into the orbit and adjacent cranial nerves as our two patients developed an orbital apex syndrome. Patients with a history of SCC of the scalp and forehead who later develop neuro-ophthalmological deficits or patients with persistent ocular symptoms should, in particular, be followed with a low threshold for cutaneous SCC or PNI of recurrent disease. SCC metastasizing into the periocular tissues and orbit by neural invasion is rare and carries a poor prognosis. The urgency for a prompt diagnosis and evaluation by a multidisciplinary team is warranted to prevent untoward outcomes of this skin cancer.Entities:
Keywords: orbital apex syndrome; squamous cell carcinoma; trigeminal neuralgia
Year: 2016 PMID: 28097083 PMCID: PMC5235655 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.932
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1(A) A 79-year-old man presenting with left-sided eyelid pain and an ulcerative brow lesion. (B) Excisional biopsy showing the histological appearance of SCC with perineural invasion (H&E 100x) of the brow lesion. (C) Axial MRI revealing an abnormal enhancing mass (red arrow) of the left cavernous sinus surrounding the left cavernous carotid artery extending into the left orbit anteriorly encasing the left optic nerve.
SCC: squamous cell carcinoma
Figure 2(A) An 80-year-old man presenting with left-sided facial droop, complete eyelid ptosis, and marked impairment of left ocular motility. (B) A photomicrographic biopsy of the supraorbital branch of the facial nerve revealing PNI of poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma (H&E 20x). (C) Positive staining for CK5/6 (20x).
PNI: perineural invasion; CK 5/6: cytokeratin 5/6