Orbits Flashcards
superior orbital fissure contents
CN III, CN IV, CN V1, CN VI, superior opthalamic vein
inferior orbital fissure contents
CN V2 (maxillary division)
provides innervation to eyelid, upper lip, nose; infraorbital artery
compartments of the orbit
preseptal, post septal (extraconal, conal, intraconal; globe)
orbital infection types
preseptal, orbital cellulitis/phlegmon, subperiosteal abscess, orbital abscess, cavernous sinus thrombosis
may be caused by paranasal sinuses, trauma, foreign body, odontogenic infection
orbital hemangioma
cavernous and capillary hemangioma
cavernous: adults; progressive proptosis; intraconal
capillary hemangioma: children; similar to port-wine stain/strawberry hemangioma
orbital lymphoma
lacrimal gland typically involved; painless downward proptosis
hyperdense on CT and hypointense on T1/2
may mold to the globe
lymphangioma globe
hamartomatous lesion in pediatric population; low flow lymphatic malformation
involve extraconal compartment typically; multilocular cystic mass
schwannoma/neurofibroma
neurofibroma/schwannoma are indistinguishable when they occur in orbit, although schwannoma is more common
most commonly affect V1 in the superior orbit
metastasis to orbits
breast, lung, thyroid, RCC, melanoma
metastatic scirrhous breast cancer can prevent exopthalmous or cause frank enopthalmos due to fibrosis
lacrimal gland lesions
epithelial tumors (pleomorphic adenoma) and malignancy (adenod cystic, mucoepidermoid carcinoma)
sarcoid and lymphoma may also impact lacrimal gland
also enlarged with orbital pseudotumor
thyroid ophthalmopathy (thyroid eye disease)
orbital inflammation due to lymphocytes that cause fibrosis of extraocular muscles
increase in intra-orbital fat»_space; stranding»_space; enlargement of muscles
I’M SLOW : inferior, medial, superior, lateral rectus muscles
pseudotumor vs thyroid ophhalmopathy
thyroid ophthalmopathy: b/l and I’M SLow enlargmeent of extraocular muscles; spares muscle tendons
pseudotumor: isolated lateral rectus enlargement
optic nerve glioma
most common tumor in the optic nerve-sheath complex
low grade astrocytoma, associated with NF1/bilateral in children
optic nerve glioma in adults is usually anaplastic astrocytoma or GBM
appearance of optic nerve glioma peds/adults
peds: fusiform enlargement; may have cyst/nodule appearance
adults: enhancing mass which extends intracranially to involve optic chiasm; may involve optic radiations
optic nerve meningioma
second most common optic nerve sheath tumor; arises from archnoid cells within leptomeninges
middle aged female with slowly progressive visual impairment
imaging appearance of optic nerve meningioma
circumferentially thickened; uniform contrast enhancement
tram track sign
optic neuritis
inflammation of optic nerve»_space; subacute vision loss, reduced color perception
oftend ue to MS, although from viral infection, sarcoid, vasculitis, toxin exposure
imaging appearance of optic neuritis
optic nerve enlargement, T2 prolongation; enhancement = active disease
chronically, optic nerve atrophies
most will also have brain white matter lesions
Devic syndrome
optic neuritis + spinal demyelination without brain lesions
globe lesions
retinoblastoma, coat disease, retinopathy of prematurity, persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous (PHPV), coloboma
retinoblastoma
most common primary malignant tumor of globe; leukocoria (white pupillary reflex) in kids < 5yo
usually unilateral; bilateral with p53 tumor suppressor mutation assocation
hyperattenuating enhancing retinal mass with calcification
trilateral retinoblastoma
bilateral retinoblastoma with pineal gland pinealblastoma
quadrilateral retinoblastoma
b/l retinoblastoma + pinealblastoma + suprasellar retinoblastoma
coat disease
vascular disease of retina; lioproteinaceous subretinal exudates»_space; retinal detachment
normal globe, but features subretinal soft tissue that does not enhance
retinopathy of prematurity (ROP)
premature infants, prolonged oxygen therapy; abnormal vascular development, hemorrhage, retinal detachment
both eyes affected equally; bilateral micropthalmia with increased attenuation (prior hemorrhage)
distinguish from retinoblastoma by small orbits (micropthalmia)
end stage is phthisis bulbi
persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous (PHPV)
persistent embryonci vasculature within vitreous»_space; loss of vision from hemorrhage, cataracts, detachment
full term infants
small eyes (microphtalmea) with increased attenuation of vitreous; no calcifications
coloboma
incomplete fusion of embryonic intraocular»_space; long/malformed globe
associations trisomy 13/18; CHARGE, VATER
cone/notch-shaped deformity; outpouching posteriorly
morning glory deformity`
congenital orbital lesions
sphenoid wing dysplasia, septo-optic dysplasia
sphenoid wing dysplasia
NF1; transmission of CSF pulsation through sphenoid wing defect may classically produce pulsatile exopthalmos
septo-optic dysplasia
optic nerve hypoplasia, agenesis of septum pellucidum
associated with schizencephaly; full thickness cleft in cerebral hemisphere