Interactive Transcript
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Let's review conal lesions of the orbit.
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These are the lesions that will affect
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the muscle cone themselves.
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As I mentioned,
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the most common of these is thyroid eye disease,
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also known as thyroid orbitopathy
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or Graves ophthalmopathy.
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The reason why I do not personally use the term Graves
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ophthalmopathy is that Graves' disease implies that the
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patient has thyrotoxicosis or hyperthyroidism.
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In point of fact,
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you can have thyroid eye disease with extraocular
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muscle enlargement and proptosis.
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Whether you are euthyroid or even having been treated.
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The Graves' disease, the patient may be hypothyroid.
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So the association of thyroid eye disease is not
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dependent on the thyroid hormone state of the patient.
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It can occur in euthyroidism, hyperthyroidism, or hypothyroidism
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and that's why my preferred term is thyroid eye disease.
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These slides are showing one.
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Of the other manifestations of Thyroid Eye Disease and
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that is that one can see fatty infiltration of the
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extraocular muscles themselves with thyroid eye disease
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as well as the proliferation of the intraconal and
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extraconal orbital fat as well as the
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extraocular muscles enlargement.
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So remember our mnemonic I'm slow for the involvement of
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the inferior rectus muscle and the medial rectus muscle
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and the superior rectus muscle while relatively sparing
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lateral rectus and superior oblique
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or inferior oblique muscles.
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The importance here is to remember to look at the
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orbital apex and identify whether or not there
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is sufficient fat around the optic nerve,
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which implies that it is not compressed and therefore
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not at risk for ischemic compressive optic neuropathy.
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Remember also that the characteristic feature of
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Thyroid Eye Disease is that it spares the
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muscle tendon insertion on the globe.
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This is a patient who had unilateral exophthalmos
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from thyroid eye disease.
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Here is another case where we have isolated unilateral
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inferior rectus muscle involvement
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with thyroid eye disease.
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We contrast that with the patients who have pseudotumor.
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Pseudotumor of the extraocular muscles will affect not
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only the muscle but also the tendon
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insertion on the globe.
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In this case, the superior rectus muscle, which is even
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getting fatter as it comes forward to the globe.
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And at its muscular insertion, there is edema that's
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characteristic of pseudotumor or idiopathic orbital
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inflammation which is different from thyroid
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we again see the relative sparing of
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the tendon insertions at the
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globe with thyroid eye disease.
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What other conditions might cause enlargement
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of the extraocular muscles?
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You can see edema of the extraocular muscles
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in patients who have, for example,
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a carotid cavernous fistula secondary
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to venous engorgement.
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You can also see enlargement of the extraocular muscles
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in glycogen storage disease that may infiltrate the
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muscle with the deposition of the glycogen material.
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These would be in the differential diagnosis
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of extraocular muscle enlargement.
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I want to make the point that rhabdomyosarcomas of
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the orbit do not affect the extraocular muscles.
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They are extra-muscular in their origin, and they are one
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of the orbital neoplasms that can affect the child.
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