We report a case of idiopathic orbital inflammation with a shallow anterior chamber and choroidal detachments. This study involved an 87-year-old female patient who presented at our department after becoming aware of the progression of diplopia. Examination of the patient's right eye revealed proptosis, as well as conjunctival edema with dilated and tortuous blood vessels. The right-eye anterior chamber was shallow, and fundus examination revealed marked choroidal detachments. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed enlargement of the right-orbit extraocular muscles and a suspected compression of the right-orbit superior and inferior ophthalmic veins, yet no expansion of the cavernous sinus. We diagnosed the patient as having idiopathic orbital inflammation in her right orbit, and subsequently started corticosteroid therapy. One week after initiating treatment, the anterior chamber was found to be nearing a normal depth, and the choroidal detachments were found to have disappeared. Our findings revealed that the inflammatory swelling of the extraocular muscle due to idiopathic orbital inflammation resulted in compression of the right-orbit superior and inferior ophthalmic veins, thus leading to an apparent choroidal circulation disorder that presented with a shallow anterior chamber and marked choroidal detachments.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6984139PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000505314DOI Listing

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