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ANTONIO SAY, MD ORBITAL DISORDERS • PRIMARILY FROM WITHIN ORBIT • ADJACENT STRUCTURE • DISTANCE SOURSE VIA THE VASCULAR PATHWAY • PART OF SYSTEMIC DISORDER

Orbital Disorders Students Notes

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Page 1: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

ORBITAL DISORDERS

• PRIMARILY FROM WITHIN ORBIT

• ADJACENT STRUCTURE

• DISTANCE SOURSE VIA THE VASCULAR PATHWAY

• PART OF SYSTEMIC DISORDER

Page 2: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Orbital Walls (7 bones)

• Ethmoid

• Frontal

• Lacrimal

• Maxillary

• Palatine

• Sphenoid

• Zygomatic

Page 3: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

• Relations Above – frontal sinus

Below – maxillary sinus

Medially- ethmoid and sphenoid sinus

• Orbital septum - barrier between the

eyelids and the orbit

- anterior limit of the orbital cavity

Page 4: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Roof of the Orbit• Frontal bone and

lesser wing of sphenoid

• Landmarks: – Lacrimal gland fossa– Fossa for the

trochlea of the sup oblique tendon and muscle

– Supraorbital notch or foramen

• Adjacent to anterior cranial fossa & frontal sinus

Page 5: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Lateral Wall of the Orbit• Zygomatic bone(strongest) and greater wing of sphenoid• Superior Orbital Fissure - separates the lateral wall from the roof - separates lesser from the greater wing of the sphenoid• Landmark:

– Lateral orbital tubercle of whitnall(lat canthal tendon, lat palpebral tendon, check lig is attached

– Frontozygomatic suture located 1cm above the tubercle• Adjacent to middle cranial fossa & temporal fossa• Lateral orbital rim is usually at the equator of the eye

allowing wide peripheral vision• Globe is vulnerable to trauma laterally (wall protect

posterior half of the eye)

Page 6: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Medial Wall• Ethmoid bone

(paper-thin)• Lacrimal bone• Body of the

Sphenoid - most posterior aspect

• Landmark:– Frontoethmoid suture

(Ant & post ethmoid arteries)

– Cribriform plate lies at frontoethmoid suture

• Adjacent to ethmoid, sphenoid sinus & nasal cavity

Page 7: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Lacrimal Crest 1. anterior lacrimal crest frontal process of the maxilla 2. posterior lacrimal crest formed by the angular process of the frontal bone 3. lacrimal groove between the two crests contains the lacrimal sac

frequently fragmented result from indirect blowout fractureInfections of ethmoid sinuses commonly extend through lamina papyracea(ethmoid foramen) to cause orbital cellulitis & proptosis

Page 8: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

maxillazygoma

Lesser wing

Greater w e

Frontal bone

lacrimal

Superior Orbital Fissure

Inferior Ophthalmic vein Lateral Superior ophthalmic vein Lacrimal, Frontal and Trochlear nerves Outside Annulus of Zinn

Medial Superior and Inferior divisions of the oculomotor nerve Abducens nerve Nasociliary nerve Within Annulus of Zinn

Page 9: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Floor of the Orbit

• Maxillary, palatine & zygomatic bones

• Form the roof of the maxillary sinus

• Landmark:– Infraorbital groove & canal

Page 10: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Orbital Floor• Inferior Orbital Fissure - separates the lateral wall from the orbital floor

• Orbital plate of the Maxilla - central area of the floor - most frequent site of blowout fracture

• Inferior Orbital Rim - frontal process of the maxilla medially - zygomatic bone laterally

Page 11: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Six P’s Orbital disorder evaluation

• Pain (inflammation, infection, hemorrhage, malignant lacrimal gland tumors, NP CA)

• Proptosis (forward displacement of the eyeball)

• Progression

• Palpation

• Pulsation

• Periorbital changes

Page 12: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

• Proptosis

forward displacement of the eyeball

• Pseudoproptosis

obvious proptosis in the absence of

orbital disease

Page 13: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Proptosis

• Axial displacement (eyeball is displaced straight ahead , retrobulbar lesion)

• Non axial displacement (eyeball displaced sideways or vertically, outside the muscle cone)

• Superior displacement (maxillary sinus tumors)

• Inferomedial displacement (dermoid cyst and lacrimal gland tumors)

• Inferolateral displacement (frontoethmoid mucocoeles, abscess, osteomas or sinus ca)

• Bilateral proptosis (graves, pseudotumor, metastatic tumor etc.)

Page 14: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

• Pulsating Proptosis - reflects the pulse of an orbital vascular malformation - transmission of the cerebral pulsations in the absence of orbital roof

• Positional Proptosis changes with valsalva’s maneuver seen in orbital varices or menigocoele

• Intermittent Proptosis sinus mucocoele

Page 15: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Progression

• Onset occur over days to weeks– Idiopathic orbital inflammatory disease– Cellulitis– Hemorrhage– Thrombophlebitis– Rhabdomyosarcoma– Thyroid ophthalmopathy– Neuroblastoma– Metastatic tumors or granulocytic sarcoma

Page 16: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Progression

• Onset occurring over months to years– Dermoids– Benign mixed tumors– Neurogenic tumor– Cavernous hemangiomas– Lymphoma– Fibrous histiocytoma– osteomas

Page 17: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Palpation

• Masses palpable in the superonasal quadrant– Mucocoeles, mucopyoceles, encephaloceles,

neurofibromas, dermoids or lymphoma

• Masses palpable in the superotemporal quadrant– Dermoid, prolapsed lacrimal gland, lacrimal

gland tumor, lymphoma or inflammatory

• Lesions behind the equator – not palpable

Page 18: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Pulsation

• Pulsation without bruit– Neurofibromatosis, meningoencephaloceles

• Pulsation with or without bruits– Carotid cavernous fistula, dural arteriovenous

fistula or orbital arteriovenous fistula

Page 19: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Page 20: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Page 21: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Orbital infection

• Cellulitis• Necrotizing fasciitis (bacterial inf fascia strep)

• Phycomycosis (most virulent fungal disease)

• Aspergillosis (fungal inf)

• Orbital tuberculosis (periostitis cold abscess)

• Parasitic diseases (trichinosis & echinococcosis)

Page 22: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Cellulitis

• Pre septal cellulitis

• Orbital cellulitis

Page 23: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Pre septal cellutiis• Inflammation and infection- eyelids and periorbital structures

ant to orbital septum• Eyelid edema, erythema• Globe not involved• Pupillary reaction, visual acuity & ocular motility not affected• Absent of pain on eye movement & chemosis• Due to penetrating trauma or cutaneous source• Children –sinusitis• < 5 yrs old – bacteremia, septicemia, meningitis (h.

influenzae)• Teens & adult – superficial source eg traumatic inoculation,

infected chalazion or epidermal inclusion cyst (staph aureus most common)

Page 24: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Orbital cellulitis

• Infection posterior to the orbital septum• 90% secondary extension of acute or chronic

bacterial sinusitis• Fever, leukocytosis, proptosis, chemosis,

restriction of ocular motility & pain on movement of the globe

• Decreased vision & pupillary abnormalities suggest orbital apex involvement

• Delay may result to orbital apex syndrome or cavernous sinus thrombosis

Page 25: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

• Intravenous antibiotics

• Culture and sensitivity of the blood, nasal and conjunctival secretions

(H. influenza, Staph, anaerobes)

• Nasal decongestants, vasoconstrictors, ENT consult

• Early surgical drainage of abscess

Page 26: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Necrotizing Fasciitis

Uncommon severe bacterial infection

Potentially fatal occurrence

Anesthesia or disproportionate pain

Patient may rapidly deteriorate if not treated

early

Page 27: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Phycomycosis

Also called mucormycosis

Extension from sinuses

Proptosed eye, orbital apex syndrome

Common in systemically ill/ debilitated patients

Page 28: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Aspergillosis

From fulminant sinus infection with orbital spread

Infection can be destructive to the bones

Fungus ball formation

Treated by excision and fungicidal drugs administration

Page 29: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Parasitic Disease

Includes trichinosis and echinococcosis

Infestation may cause lid and extraocular muscle inflammation

Cysticercosis from tapeworm may present as mass lesion in the orbit

Page 30: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Orbital inflammation

• Graves ophthalmopathy

• Idiopathic orbital inflammation(orbital pseudotumor)

• Sarcoidosis

• Vasculitis – giant cell arteritis, polyarteritis nodosa

Page 31: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Congenital Anomalies

• Anophthalmos

• Microphthalmos

• Cranifacial Clefting

• Tumors

Page 32: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD

Orbital neoplasm

• Congenital orbital tumor• Vascular tumor• Neural tumor• Mesenchymal tumor• Lymphoproliferative disorders• Lacrimal gland tumor• Secondary orbital tumors• Metastatic tumors

Page 33: Orbital Disorders Students Notes

ANTONIO SAY, MD