Author/Authors :
Jafari, Najmeh Student Research Committee - Faculty of Medicine - Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari, Iran , Jafari, Reza Department of Ophthalmology - Faculty of Medicine - Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Generally presents in childhood, orbital lymphangioma is an uncommon
unencapsulated vascular malformation of the lymphatic system. These benign cystic lesions
represent 1%-4% of all orbital masses and may appear after an upper respiratory infection or
minor trauma. Because of its nature, the management can be challenging and depends on the
clinical presentation. We report an 8-year-old boy with orbital lymphangioma presented with
acute proptosis. Then, we discuss different features of this disorder plus its management
Case Presentation: An 8-year-old boy was presented with sudden left eye proptosis. He had
normal visual acuity and color vision without ocular pain or diplopia. An infiltrative and diffused
intraconal plus extraconal mass was detected in orbital computed tomography. Contrastenhanced
MRI revealed a multilobulated infiltrative heterogeneous lesion with fluid-fluid levels.
The diagnosis was made on imaging, and he went under treatment with an oral corticosteroid.
The symptoms were entirely resolved, and no recurrence occurred during the follow-up. There
are several surgical and nonsurgical therapies for orbital lymphangioma. Still, the priority is
conservative management, such as sclerotherapy (including OK-432, doxycycline, sodium
tetradecyl sulfate, etc.), bleomycin, carbon dioxide laser, systemic corticosteroids, and so on.
Conclusions: In most cases, the current imaging methods make a noninvasive diagnosis of orbital
lymphangioma possible. Conservative management should be considered the first treatment.