Interactive Transcript
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This patient had a mass in the orbit that was causing
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discomfort along the lateral orbital
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wall on the left side.
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As we scroll through this case, we note that the
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lacrimal gland is enlarged on the left
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side compared to the right side.
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This lesion extends posteriorly in the extraconal space
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and extends even to the orbital apex.
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As we come further
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inferiorly, we note a discrepancy in the appearance of
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the pterygopalatine fossa on the left
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side compared with the right side.
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The pterygopalatine fossa is located posterior
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to the posterior wall of the maxillary antrum.
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Normally, it contains fat and the pterygopalatine ganglion.
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Here we see the fat and we see a little bit of the ganglion.
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On the left side,
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we see enlargement of the pterygopalatine fossa and
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loss of the normal fat of the pterygopalatine fossa.
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How did this tumor get into the pterygopalatine fossa?
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What one sees here is one of the egresses from the
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pterygopalatine fossa, and that is the inferior
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orbital fissure. It leads into the orbit.
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The lateral egress from the pterygopalatine fossa
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is called the pterygomaxillary fissure.
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It leads to the muscles of mastication.
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And although we see nice definition
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of the muscles of mastication
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on the right side, we lose that definition and the fat
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drains between the muscles on the left side,
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indicating infiltration.
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Medially, one can see that from the pterygopalatine
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fossa, one can enter the nasal cavity.
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This medial opening is called the sphenopalatine foramen
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and it, too, is one of the exits from the pterygopalatine fossa
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through which cranial nerve five branches may enter.
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The pterygopalatine fossa also has
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a posterior exit.
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And for that, I'm going to zoom in just a little bit more.
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This posterior entrance is the foramen rotundum
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and it is one of the exits from the pterygopalatine fossa of the
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second division of the fifth cranial nerve. You notice
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that it is enlarged compared to the
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contralateral foramen rotundum.
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Finally,
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I want to demonstrate another of the inferior exits of
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the pterygopalatine fossa, this is the vidian canal
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through which the vidian nerve runs. You notice that it
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has some fat within the canal, as well as we
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see the fat in the pterygopalatine fossa.
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Here we have our sphenopalatine foramen going into
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the nasal cavity. We have our pterygomaxillary fissure
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going into the masticator space, and we see enlargement
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of the opening of the vidian canal and it
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is filled with soft tissue. That's tumor.
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So, let's get back to the original lesion which arose
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from the lacrimal gland. And for that, we have
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de-zoom. As I mentioned previously,
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the lacrimal gland can be considered a type of
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salivary gland with respect to the different
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pathologies that affect it.
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The most common malignancy of the salivary glands is
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adenoid cystic carcinoma.
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Adenoid cystic carcinoma
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has a 50%-60% rate of perineural spread.
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What we've seen here is a lesion of the lacrimal gland
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that has spread posteriorly via the second division of the fifth
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cranial nerve to infiltrate the pterygopalatine
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fossa and all of its nerve branches.
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So I would have come down hard on adenoid
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cystic carcinoma of the lacrimal gland.
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I would have been wrong.
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This ended up being a lymphoma.
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The types of lymphoma that can affect the lacrimal
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gland are most commonly the non-Hodgkin's B-cell type,
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of which mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues
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or MALT lymphomas, are the most common.
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95% of patients who have orbital lymphoma will
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have systemic manifestations of the lymphoma.
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Lymphoma of the orbit most commonly affects the
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lacrimal gland, but it can also affect the conjunctiva,
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the eyelid, and the bones.
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So this was a fakeout for me going down the route of
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adenoid cystic carcinoma based on the perineural
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spread, but we do know that lymphoma as well can cause
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perineural spread.
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In this case, infiltration along the pterygopalatine fossa.
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