AIMS. 1) To evaluate epidemiological data (age, gender, initial complaints, and ophthalmic findings) of a patient cohort with a primary or secondary orbital meningioma. 2) To evaluate the clinical course of these patients. 3) To evaluate the outcome of treatment. PATIENTS AND METHODS. All consecutive patients with a presumed meningioma with orbital involvement seen at the Academic Medical Center, Utrecht, in the period 1/1/1992-31/12/1999 were evaluated retrospectively. RESULTS. Sixty-three patients with either an optic nerve sheath (n = 16) or a sphenoid ridge or tuberculum sellae meningioma (n = 47) were seen (mean age: 41.9 and 47.6 years, respectively); 20 of these had been treated neurosurgically previously. Fifty-three were females. The most frequent initial symptoms in both groups were proptosis and visual complaints. Thirty-three patients were followed without treatment, eight of them showing a lingering worsening of vision and a slow increase of tumor mass. Thirty patients were operated for different reasons (to confirm the diagnosis, or because of decreasing vision, disfiguring proptosis, threatening of the optic chiasm, or severe retrobulbar pain). Life-threatening problems did not occur, cranial nerve damage being the most frequent complication. Macroscopic radical tumor resection was only obtained in about 50% of the operated patients, but immediate (partial) relief of subjective complaints was obtained in up to 90%. A recurrence with clinical symptoms was seen in two patients within the relatively short follow-up period. CONCLUSIONS. Proptosis and, secondly, vision complaints are the most frequent symptoms in patients with either a primary or a secondary orbital meningioma. Their clinical course is extremely variable. Loss of vision is frequently seen in both groups. Orbitoneurosurgical meningioma resection has a high immediate success rate. Damage to cranial nerves is the most frequent complication of meningioma resection.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1076/orbi.20.1.25.2640 | DOI Listing |
Brain Spine
December 2024
Department of Neurosurgery, Neuroscience Center, Copenhagen University Hospital (Rigshospitalet), Copenhagen, Denmark.
Research Question: to describe and investigate the case of an 11-year-old boy with the concomitant pneumocephalus, subcutaneous- and orbitopalpebral emphysema after the removal of a giant meningioma. Furthermore, our aim is to discuss the findings and the pathophysiology in relation to cases found in literature.
Material And Methods: We performed a search in PubMed, Cochrane, MEDLINE and Google Scholar by the usage of the words orbital or periorbital, combined with emphysema and neurosurgery.
Osteoblastoma is an uncommon benign bone tumor rarely involving the craniofacial skeleton. Manifestations in the fronto-orbital region are exceptionally rare. A 19-year-old man presented with persistent headache, nausea, vomiting, right eye pain, and longstanding right exophthalmos.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Anim Hosp Assoc
January 2025
Laboratory of Veterinary Clinical Oncology, Joint Department of Veterinary Medicine, Faculty of Applied Biological Sciences, Gifu University, Gifu, Japan (T.M.).
Although intracranial and spinal cord meningioma prognoses have been reported, few studies have evaluated the outcomes and prognoses of orbital and optic nerve meningiomas in dogs. We aimed to evaluate the outcomes of canine orbital meningiomas. The seven dogs included were cytologically or histopathologically diagnosed with meningiomas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Neurol Neurosurg
December 2024
Federal Center of the Brain and Neurotechnologies, Moscow, Russian Federation.
Objective: To devise a predictive model for estimating the requisite volume of the orbit in patients poised for resection of hyperostotic spheno-orbital meningiomas.
Material And Methods: The predictive regression model was conceived through the retrospective analysis of perioperative radiological data from 25 patients who initially underwent surgery at the Burdenko Neurosurgery Center for hyperostotic spheno-orbital meningiomas grade I. The model quality metrics were evaluated utilizing the performance library in the R programming language, including the Akaike Information Criterion, Bayesian Information Criterion, adjusted R-squared, Root Mean Squared Error, and Sigma.
Cureus
November 2024
Department of Surgery, Baghdad Teaching Hospital, Medical City Complex, Baghdad, IRQ.
Spheno-orbital meningiomas (SOMs) are rare tumors that involve the sphenoid wing and orbit, leading to symptoms such as proptosis and vision loss. Their proximity to critical neurovascular structures complicates surgical resection, making management challenging. A systematic review of 22 paper series involving 1042 patients was conducted using PubMed and Scopus.
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