| Literature DB >> 32321476 |
Ruiqi Ma1,2,3, Yun Cheng1, Lu Gan1,2,3, Xiaoting Zhou1,2,3, Jiang Qian4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coexistence of thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO) and ocular myasthenia gravis (OMG) is very rare. Little is known about the orbital histopathology associated with this condition. The authors reported a case of TAO coexisting with OMG and explored the histopathologic changes in extraocular muscles. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Extraocular muscles; Histopathology; Ocular myasthenia gravis; Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32321476 PMCID: PMC7178726 DOI: 10.1186/s12886-020-01431-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
Fig. 1Case presentation (TAO with OMG). a A 32-year-old male complaint of bilateral proptosis for 2 years. Physical examination revealed slight ptosis of the left upper eyelid and mild retraction of the right upper eyelid. The patient reported a medical history of OMG, and the unnatural crease of the right eyelid resulted from previous blepharoplasty to correct ptosis. The CT scan showed bilateral enlargement of the medial rectus muscles. b Orbital decompression partially relieved the right upper eyelid retraction but resulted in new onset of left upper eyelid retraction due to increased motor impulses to sustain eyelid elevation. The CT scan showed balanced two-wall decompression in both orbits
Histopathologic findings of extraocular muscles in OMG reported in literature
| Light Microscopy | Electron Microsopy |
|---|---|
| Myofiber atrophy, central nucleus | Myofibrillar loss and disarray, Z-line streaming |
| Fatty replacement of myofibers, lipid vacuoles | Subsarcolemmal aggregates of swollen mitochondria |
| Lymphocytic infiltration | Intramyocellular/Intranuclear lipid vacuoles |
| Sporadic aggregation of mitochondria | Collagen deposition between myofibers |
| Others: focal thickening of basal lamina, intermyofibrillar deposition of glycogen | Others: pyknotic nucleus, sarcoplasmic reticulum dilatation, autophagic vacuoles containing lipofuscins |
OMG, ocular myasthenia gravis
References: Europa TA et al. 2019 [6], Rautenbach RM et al. 2017 [7]
Fig. 2Histopathologic changes in TAO + OMG, TAO and control extraocular muscle samples. a Hematoxylin-eosin stain (× 400) showed diffuse inflammation and myofiber enlargement in the TAO + OMG and TAO samples. The cross-sectional area of each myofiber was calculated based on the largest diameter (solid line) perpendicular to the longitudinal axis (dashed line) measured in 3 randomly chosen fields of each slide. The myofiber size was larger in the TAO + OMG (289.9 ± 142.5 μm2) and TAO (544.1 ± 160.6 μm2) samples than the control samples (157.0 ± 47.7 μm2). The variation of myofiber size was smaller in the TAO (± 29.5% around average) and control (± 30.4% around average) samples than the TAO + OMG samples (± 49.2% around average). The bars represent the 95% confidential interval. The box represents the mean and standard deviation. b Alcian blue stain (× 400) demonstrated accumulation of glycosaminoglycan (blue) in the TAO + OMG and TAO samples. The proportion of glycosaminoglycan was quantified in 3 randomly chosen fields of each slide based on the fraction of positive-stained pixels in the total pixels of the interstitial space. The glycosaminoglycan-occupied area was larger in the TAO + OMG samples (48.8 ± 12.2%) than the TAO (28.4 ± 3.6%) and control (3.3 ± 0.8%) samples. c Masson stain (× 400) revealed increased collagen fibers (blue) in the TAO samples but not in the TAO + OMG samples. The proportion of collagen fibers in the interstitial space was quantified in 3 randomly chosen fields of each slide based on pixel counting. The collagen-occupied area was larger in the TAO samples (60.5 ± 6.4%) than in the TAO + OMG (36.1 ± 4.3%) and control (33.9 ± 2.7%) samples
Fig. 3Other histopathologic changes in TAO + OMG, TAO and control extraocular muscle samples. a The immunostaining of αSMA (× 400), a potential marker of fibrosis, revealed stronger reactivity (brown) in the TAO samples than in the TAO + OMG and control samples. b The periodic acid Schiff stain (× 400) demonstrated glycogen (red) in the muscle fibers, showing endomysial aggregation of glycogen in the TAO samples and segmental deposition of glycogen in the TAO + OMG samples. c Muscle types were distinguished based on the ATPase stain (× 200) of frozen sections, with weak intensity for type I fibers and strong intensity for type II fibers. Same fiber types tended to group together in the TAO + OMG samples, resulting in predominantly type I fibers in some fascicles (dotted line) and type II fibers in others (dashed line). d Central nuclei (white arrowheads) were frequently observed in the TAO + OMG samples on hematoxylin-eosin stain (× 400) but not in the TAO or control samples. e The Gomori’s trichrome stain (× 400) of frozen sections revealed mitochondrial distribution (red) in the TAO + OMG samples, showing both a normal pattern of linear distribution (white arrowheads) and an abnormal pattern of focal aggregation (black arrowheads)