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Mark Scott Brown, M. D
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Orbital Tumors
Orbital Tumors - Cavernous Hemangioma

     

    General | Imaging | Pathology | Surgery | Sponsors | Bottom of page

     

    General

    • most common benign solitary lesion in adults
    • 30-60 year old female is typical
    • slow axial proptosis over 3-5 yrs, averaging 5mm
    • retinal striae
    • hyperopia
    • strabismus
    • Optic nerve compression
    • rapid growth in pregnancy
    • increased intraocular pressure

     

    Imaging

    • CT: smooth discrete lesion, fills with dye after 20 min; coronal cuts important to know tumor position relative to optic nerve. for sugical plan
    • MRI: hypointense to fat on T1, hyperintense to fat on T2
    • U/S: high reflectivity (A-scan high amplitude internal echoes)

    Pathology

    • well encapsulated and tolerated
    • shows large cavernous spaces with red blood cells

    Surgery

    • surgery for symptoms especially optic nerve compression
    • usually lateral orbitotomy with complete resection from intraconal position generally feasible

 

   

 

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