Interactive Transcript
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This was a patient who had decreased sensation along
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the anterior aspect of the face below the orbit.
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Scrolling the axial scans,
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one sees a mass in the floor of the orbit.
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It is well-defined and quite round
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without infiltrative margins.
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Looking on the coronal scan,
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we can see that this lesion is intimately associated
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with the infraorbital foramen.
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The normal infraorbital foramen
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is seen on the left side.
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On the right side,
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we see depression of the infraorbital foramen,
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and we see the mass, which is extraconal in location.
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We see that it is displacing the inferior rectus
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muscle upward. Here's our medial rectus muscle,
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our superior oblique,
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our superior rectus muscle, and our lateral rectus muscle,
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with the optic nerve sheath complex centrally located.
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So this is indeed an extraconal mass.
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When one considers extraconal masses that are well
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defined, one should consider schwannomas.
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Now, these schwannomas may be involving the portions of the
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cranial nerves that innervate the extraocular muscles,
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or it could be a branch of the fifth cranial nerve.
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We know that the infraorbital nerve is a branch of
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the second division of the fifth cranial nerve,
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also known as the maxillary nerve.
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So in looking at this case and noting that it was
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extraconal, involving the infraorbital foramen,
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I went strongly for a schwannoma of the infraorbital
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nerve, a branch of the maxillary nerve.
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What I failed to understand was that this patient
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had previously had an orbital floor fracture.
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This ended up, histopathologically, being a giant cell
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reparative granuloma, associated with the orbital floor
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fracture and the trauma and hematoma that was
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associated with it many years earlier.
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This was a very tricky case.
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