Alkatan HM, Al Otaibi M, Maktabi AMY, Aljaedi H, Elkhamary SM, Al-Faky Y, Alsuhaibani AH. Clinical, radiological and histopathological characteristics of surgically removed orbital hematic cysts: A case series.
Saudi J Ophthalmol 2018;
32:45-51. [PMID:
29755271 PMCID:
PMC5943833 DOI:
10.1016/j.sjopt.2018.04.002]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/04/2022] Open
Abstract
Background
Hematic cyst is a rare orbital condition that has a wide range of clinical presentation and is characterized pathologically by lack of endothelial lining.
Purpose
To correlate clinical and radiological features of hematic cysts, to tissue diagnosis, and investigate the possible etiology behind this condition, its relation to trauma and other interesting histopathological findings.
Methods
Retrospective case series at King Khaled Eye Specialist Hospital (KKESH) and King Abdulaziz University Hospital (KAUH) of all orbital lesions with tissue findings supporting the clinical and/or radiological diagnosis of hematic cyst.
Results
A series of 13 cases was studied, 8 males and 5 females. Age ranged from 2 to 84 years with a median of 54. Most cases presented with proptosis (76.9%) and limitation of eye movements (69.2%). History of trauma was confirmed in only 2/13. The clinical diagnosis of hematic cyst was made prior to surgery in 38.4%. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) confirmed the presence of blood in the orbit in 7/7. Surgical intervention was the mainstay of treatment. Histopathologically, these lesions demonstrated variable constituents including blood break-down products (hemosiderin), macrophages, mononuclear inflammatory cells, hemorrhage, absent endothelial lining, reactive fibrosis and capsule-like formation. Cholesterol clefts with typical granulomas and multinucleated giant cells were present in 2 cases. A clue to an underlying vascular lesion was found histopathologically in 30.8%. None of the patients developed recurrence or long-term complications with an average follow up period of 1 year.
Conclusion
Hematic cyst is a challenging clinical diagnosis that can be aided by radiological examination and histopathological confirmation. Trauma does not seem to play a major role while presence of a pre-existing vascular lesion with spontaneous hemorrhage may be an etiologic factor. Associated cholesterol granuloma is an interesting controversial finding. Surgical intervention is curative with possible persisting motility disturbance and/or the eye deviation and worse prognosis in post-traumatic cases.
Collapse