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Lipogenic Thyroid Eye Disease

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This was a patient who presented with a clinical

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history of left-sided exophthalmos.

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With patients who have unilateral exophthalmos,

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the most common etiology remains thyroid orbitopathy

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or thyroid eye disease.

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Yes, it's true that thyroid eye disease is generally a

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bilateral process. However, even for unilateral proptosis,

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it is the most common cause.

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The differential diagnosis for unilateral proptosis often

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is extension of sinus inflammation into the orbit,

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which can cause proptosis. In this case,

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the patient is again evaluated with axial and coronal

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CT scan images and one sees the enlargement

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of the extraocular muscles,

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in this case largely the medial rectus muscle.

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We note the sparing of the lateral rectus muscle.

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One of the features of thyroid eye disease

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that distinguishes it from pseudotumor,

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which can also affect the extraocular muscles,

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is the sparing of the tendinous insertions of the muscle.

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So we say that thyroid eye disease

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affects the belly of the muscle,

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but will spare the tendon insertion of the

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muscle to the globe. As we scroll,

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we also see that this is true of the inferior rectus

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muscle as it inserts on the globe as well,

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that it is not as fat anteriorly where it inserts on

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the muscle compared to the muscle belly itself.

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Let's look at the coronal image.

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You see that the superior rectus muscle is

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also quite enlarged in this individual.

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Let's magnify this and demonstrate it better.

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So here is the superior rectus muscle,

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which is quite large on the left side,

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even larger than on the right side.

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We still have a very fat medial rectus muscle and inferior

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rectus muscle. As we course towards the globe.

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You notice that the caliber of these muscles is decreasing

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as the tendinous insertion is not involved.

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This is to be contrasted with idiopathic

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orbital inflammation,

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where sometimes the tendon is most involved

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and the muscle belly less so.

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There is a lipogenic form of thyroid eye disease as well.

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In this case, with lipogenic form,

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one sees prominence of the orbital fat and protrusion of

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the orbital fat out of the natural confines of the orbit,

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and yet the muscles are not enlarged.

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One of the hints that will show you that you're dealing

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with the lipogenic form of thyroid eye disease is when the

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lacrimal gland is displaced out of the lacrimal fossa and

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is anterior to the bony margin of the lateral orbit.

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In this patient, we see the lacrimal gland

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end, which is anteriorly located from the lacrimal fossa

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secondary to the proptosis associated

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with thyroid eye disease.

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So this would be another hint that one is dealing with

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thyroid eye disease, the anterior displacement of the

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lacrimal gland out of the orbit and into the soft

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tissues anterior to the lateral orbital wall.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Orbit

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Neuroradiology

Neuro

Head and Neck

CT

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