1. Photophobia in a blind eye after removal of a progressive orbital optic glioma with denervation.
- Author
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Loh CK, Weis B, van Velthoven V, Reiff C, and Rössler J
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Denervation, Humans, Male, Optic Nerve Glioma surgery, Orbit surgery, Trigeminal Nerve physiopathology, Blindness etiology, Exophthalmos etiology, Optic Nerve surgery, Optic Nerve Glioma complications, Photophobia physiopathology
- Abstract
Unlabelled: Optic glioma (OPG) accounts for 4-8% of all brain tumors in children. En-block removal of intraorbital tumor is recommended in cases with disfiguring exophthalmos and impaired vision. Surgical resection of intraorbital optic nerve (ON) poses the risks of permanent ptosis and globe atrophy. We present here the case of a 4-year-old boy with exophthalmos and near blindness due to an intraorbital OPG. Despite chemotherapy he showed progressive exophthalmos and vision loss. Bony orbital decompression with ON transection temporally reduced his exophthalmos. OPG resection was required later for recurrence of his exophthalmos secondary to tumor progression. Post operatively, he had preserved oculomotor nerve functions but developed globe ischemia. Unusually, his ischemic globe caused him to have pain and severe photophobia, which later lead to enucleation. Photophobia has been reported in blind patients. Animal models and MRI functional imaging showed activation of trigeminal pathway during photophobia in completely transected ON. However, the exact neuro-ophthalmology pathway requires further study., Conclusion: This is the first described case of photophobia after excision of OPG with ON denervation. Photophobia can be a serious side effect that significantly lowers the patient's quality of life., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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