—  SPECIALTY CONFERENCE  —

Ophthalmic Pathology
Wednesday, March 2, 2011, 7:30 PM
CC 101 A/B









Ophthalmic Pathology Classics
Moderator: THOMAS J. CUMMINGS
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, NC
Disclosure: In accordance with ACCME guidelines regarding disclosure, the USCAP policy requires that faculty members who have a significant financial or other relationship with a commercial company, entity, or service (which will be discussed in this Symposium) must disclose this to attendees. The Academy also requires that speakers disclose any products that are not labeled for the use under discussion. The speakers listed below have indicated they have nothing to disclose.
Panelists: Patricia Chevez-Barrios, The Methodist Hospital, Houston, TX
J. Douglas Cameron, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, DC
Diva R. Salomao, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN
Codrin E. Iacob, The New York Medical College, New York, NY
Sander R. Dubovy, Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, Miami, FL



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Case 1

Submitted by: Patricia Chevez-Barrios -

Clinical Summary:

This is an 8-month-old male with history of leukocoria (white pupil) of the left eye noted by the mother 2 months prior to enucleation. Patient was seen by pediatrician and then by general ophthalmologist whom refer the patient to an ocular oncologist. The right eye was unremarkable. No treatment prior to enucleation was performed.



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Case 2

Submitted by: J. Douglas Cameron -

Clinical Summary:

78 year-old woman presenting with vitreous hemorrhage of the right eye. Subretinal hemorrhage was identified and thought to be due to subretinal neovascularization of age- related macular degeneration associated with a dense subretinal scar. The lesion increased in size. Ultrasound was not diagnostic, however, because of the risk of intraocular tumor the globe was enucleated.

Pertinent Laboratory Data:

Best corrected vision of the right eye was hand motions. The intraocular pressure was 21 mm Hg. Age-related macular degeneration was present in the left eye that had reduced her best corrected vision to 20/60.

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Case 3

Submitted by: Diva R. Salomao -

Clinical History:

A previously healthy 47-year-old woman came to our institution for evaluation of a right orbital mass which was incidentally found during work-up for shortness of breath. A CTA to exclude pulmonary embolism incidentally revealed an orbital mass confirmed later by dedicated orbital imaging. Although at first, this orbital mass seemed to be asymptomatic, on further questioning the patient reported intermittent short lived blurry vision and episodic discomfort near the right temple for the past year. She denied any discrete ocular pain, diplopia, limitation of ocular movements or noticed proptosis. On clinical examination, a 4 mm proptosis was present and there was tenderness to palpation over the superior temporal aspect of the right orbit which appeared full but was not discolored. The clinical differential diagnosis based on the infiltrative appearance of the mass on MRI included lymphoma, favored due to the lack of symptoms, but also idiopathic orbital inflammation and sarcoidosis, given the history of cough.




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Case 4

Submitted by: Codrin E. Iacob -

Clinical Summary:

A 53 year old African American male presented with a right medial canthus mass evolving over the past few months. Best corrected visual acuity was 20/20 in both eyes; visual field, pupillary exam, and ocular motility were within normal limits bilaterally. Imaging studies revealed a right anterior orbital pre-septal mass without sinus extension; SUV of 4.2 was noted in the lesion on PET-CT scan. The patient underwent excision of the mass followed by cryotherapy of the surgical bed and conjunctivoplasty using amniotic membrane grafting. Postoperatively, 60 Gy external beam radiotherapy was applied. Clinical and microscopic images of the lesion are presented.


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Case 5

Submitted by: Sander R. Dubovy -

Clinical Summary:

This 84 year old male with a history of endophthalmitis in May, 2007 underwent pars plana vitrectomy and progressed to no light perception vision OD. The patient was lost to follow-up until the patient presented to BPEI on 9/14/07 with on week of decreased visual acuity, pain, and photophobia OS. Upon examination, the patient had a perforated corneal ulcer OD and multifocal exudative retinal detachments and disc edema OS. The patient's visual acuity was NLP OD and 20/200 OS. The patient now undergoes enucleation OD to rule out sympathetic ophthalmia.




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Handouts for all Specialty Conferences will be accessible via the "Educational Materials" section on the homepage the morning after each respective conference. Printed copies of the handout will not be available at the meeting.