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Mark Scott Brown, M. D815.642.9504 (fax) mark@eyeplastics.com (email)
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General
most common benign solitary lesion in adults30-60 year old female is typicalslow axial proptosis over 3-5 yrs, averaging 5mmretinal striaehyperopiastrabismusOptic nerve compressionrapid growth in pregnancyincreased intraocular pressure Imaging CT: smooth discrete lesion, fills with dye after 20 min; coronal cuts important to know tumor position relative to optic nerve. for sugical planMRI: hypointense to fat on T1, hyperintense to fat on T2U/S: high reflectivity (A-scan high amplitude internal echoes)Pathology well encapsulated and toleratedshows large cavernous spaces with red blood cellsSurgery surgery for symptoms especially optic nerve compression usually lateral orbitotomy with complete resection from intraconal position generally feasible
Imaging
Pathology
Surgery
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