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Surgery for Exophthalmos

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Title: Surgery for Exophthalmos


1
Surgery for Exophthalmos
  • Stephanie Cordes, MD
  • Karen Calhoun, MD

2
Introduction
  • Exophthalmos is a condition of altered thyroid
    metabolism that causes protein depositions within
    the extraocular muscles
  • Graves disease is a multisystem disorder
    characterized by
  • hyperthyroidism associated with diffuse
    hyperplasia of the thyroid gland
  • infiltrative ophthalmopathy leading to
    exophthalmos
  • infiltrative dermopathy with localized pretibial
    myxedema
  • Therapy is still primarily directed at
    manifestations of the disease in a palliative
    fashion

3
Pathophysiology
  • Many patients are euthyroid at the time the eye
    symptoms appear, although further testing usually
    reveals dysthyroidism
  • Treatment of the thyroid disease does not prevent
    the later development of orbital manifestations
    or ameliorate eye symptoms already present
  • Current theory involves autoreactive T cells
    which are reactive to the TSH receptors
  • Humoral immunity produces antibodies to the TSH
    receptor that are stimulatory, resulting in
    hyperthyroidism

4
Pathophysiology
  • Extraocular muscles are the site of the most
    clinically evident changes in these patients
  • Muscles are enlarged and there is an associated
    intense proliferation of perimysial fibroblasts
    and dense lymphocytic infiltration.
  • Retrobulbar fibroblasts secrete
    glycosaminoglycans which causes interstitial
    edema, these cells can also produce MHC class II
    molecules, heat shock proteins, and lymphocyte
    adhesion molecules
  • Fibroblast antigen may be similar to all or part
    of the TSH receptor, representing a shared
    thyroid-eye antigen

5
Pathophysiology
6
Graves Ophthalmopathy
  • More than 50 of patients with Graves disease
    have eye complaints, only 5 warrant intervention
  • Lid retraction is the orbital symptom that is
    most likely to regress without treatment
  • Proptosis usually peaks 4 to 13 months after the
    onset of the disease, and regression in the range
    of 3 to 7 mm occurs in half of the patients over
    the ensuing 1 to 3 years
  • Eye involvement is bilateral in the majority of
    patients although 5 to 14 will have unilateral
    disease
  • Major asymmetry of eye involvement is common,
    Graves remains the most common etiology of
    unilateral proptosis in adults

7
Classification
  • ATA class I - involves lid lag and appearance of
    a stare
  • ATA class II - increased intraocular pressure
    leads to chemosis, excessive lacrimation,
    periorbital edema, and photophobia
  • ATA class III - volume of orbital contents
    increases causing proptosis (increase of 4ml
    leads to 6mm proptosis)
  • ATA class IV - extraocular muscles become
    dysfunctional resulting in decreased ocular
    mobility and diplopia
  • ATA class V - corneal exposure, desiccation,
    irritation and ulceration
  • ATA class VI - most severe, involves damage to
    the optic nerve leading to impairment of vision

8
ATA Classification
9
Patient Evaluation
  • Most patients are initially evaluated by a
    medical specialist
  • Full endocrinology work up is essential
  • Some patients complain of symptoms of
    hyperthyroidism
  • Any patient with unilateral or bilateral
    exophthalmos should be considered to have thyroid
    disease
  • Increased total and free T3, total and free T4,
    reverse T3 uptake, TRH, and thyroid stimulating
    immunoglobulin
  • Most patients can be shown to have some amount of
    thyroid dysfunction

10
Physical Examination
  • Can confirm the upper and lower eyelid
    retraction, proptosis, and other physical signs
    of hyperthyroidism
  • Pathognomonic sign for Graves' ophthalmopathy is
    hyperemia over lateral rectus muscle
  • Complete ophthalmologic exam should be performed
  • Serial eye exams are required to monitor disease
    progress and response to therapy, they should
    measure soft tissue changes, document proptosis,
    intraocular pressure, ocular motility,
    strabismus, and visual function
  • Complete head and neck exam including thyroid
    status

11
Physical Examination
12
Radiology
  • CT scans of the orbit are essential if surgery is
    planned
  • Findings include 2 to 8 fold increase in the
    extraocular muscle bodies sparing the tendinous
    portions
  • Inferior and medial rectus muscles are most
    commonly involved
  • Ultrasound can demonstrate thickening of all the
    extraocular muscles - used to monitor the
    response to therapy
  • T2 weighted images on MRI can show active
    inflammation in the orbit, no bony detail
  • Scans should include paranasal sinuses and rule
    out any significant sinus disease

13
CT Scan
14
Differential Diagnosis
  • Most common diagnosis to consider in bilateral
    proptosis is pseudotumor cerebri
  • Lymphoma of the orbit can produce proptosis
  • Metastatic tumor, vascular anomaly, neurofibroma,
    and retinoblastoma can all cause unilateral
    proptosis
  • Most other disease entities have only superficial
    similarities to Graves ophthalmopathy and can be
    ruled out
  • Keep a high index of suspicion if the diagnosis
    is to be made in a timely fashion

15
Differential Diagnosis
16
Management
  • Multispecialty team approach is recommended
    because of multiple organ systems involved
  • Team should include - endocrinologist,
    radiologist, nuclear medicine physician,
    radiation therapist, ophthalmologist,
    otolaryngologist, and neurosurgeon
  • Both medical and surgical management options for
    the treatment of Graves disease

17
Medical Management
  • All patients require management of their
    hyperthyroidism
  • Management usually centers on the suppression of
    the thyroid activity, after euthyroid status is
    achieved for 6 months the orbital status usually
    stabilizes
  • 1 to 2 of patient will develop a deterioration
    in the visual status and the treatment of choice
    is high dose steroids
  • Adjunctive treatment includes lubricants,
    artificial tears, moisture chambers, and taping
    retracted eyelids if necessary
  • Low dose radiation therapy has been used 20Gy in
    10 fractions for 2 weeks - patients early in
    disease process most likely to benefit

18
Surgical Management
  • Preoperative counseling centers on risks of
    vision motility disorders and failure to achieve
    a satisfactory result
  • Considered for two stages of dysthyroid
    exophthalmos
  • In the acute or subacute stages, steroids are
    used, if the patient fails to regain visual
    acuity with the steroids then surgical
    decompression is indicated
  • In the late stage, when proptosis and lid
    retraction is evident then cosmetic decompression
    is indicated
  • Usual functional indications for decompression
    are decreasing visual acuity, visual field
    defects, abnormal visual-evoked potentials, and
    disc edema as well as corneal exposure with
    keratitis not responsive to medical management

19
Surgical Approaches
20
Superior Orbital Decompression
  • Involves unroofing the entire superior orbital
    wall by a craniotomy
  • Neurosurgeon exposes the orbit by a frontal
    craniotomy
  • After the optic nerve has been identified, the
    bony roof of the orbit is removed from just
    anterior to the optic foramen to the
    anterosuperior orbital rim
  • Superior periosteum is then incised in an
    H-shaped fashion and the orbital fat allowed to
    herniate into the cranial vault
  • Titanium mesh and pericranial flap are used to
    close the defect
  • This approach is used for only very severe cases
    due to associated morbidity

21
Medial Orbital Decompression
  • Approached through the standard external
    ethmoidectomy incision or through a coronal
    forehead approach
  • Ethmoidectomy approach displaces the medial
    canthal tendon and elevates the lacrimal sac out
    of its fossa
  • Anterior and posterior ethmoid arteries are
    identified and clipped
  • A complete ethmoidectomy is performed removing
    all the mucosa bearing septa
  • Posterior ethmoid cells are removed back to the
    posterior ethmoid plate
  • Medial orbital periosteum is incised
    longitudinally

22
Medial Orbital Decompression
23
Inferior Orbital Decompression
  • Creates a large inferior orbital floor blow out
    fracture while sparing injury to the infraorbital
    nerve
  • Procedure can be done through subciliary,
    transconjunctival, or Caldwell-Luc incision, but
    some authors prefer to combine the approaches for
    better visualization
  • A skin-muscle flap is elevated in the lower
    eyelid and the orbital rim is visualized
  • The periosteum is incised and elevated from the
    orbital floor for approximately 4 cm
  • Caldwell-Luc incision is made sublabially and a
    wide antrostomy is formed

24
Inferior Orbital Decompression
  • Course of the infraorbital nerve is visualized
    and the bone medial and lateral to the nerve is
    removed
  • The remainder of the floor is removed under
    direct visualization, 3 cm anteroposterior range
    for bone removal is safe, medially removed to
    lacrimal fossa and laterally removed to the
    zygoma
  • Periorbita is incised longitudinally, number of
    incisions determined intraoperatively, 4 to 6
    usually adequate
  • Fat herniates into the defects on either side of
    the nerve
  • Middle meatal ostium enlarged to provide for
    ventilation and drainage of the sinus

25
Inferior Orbital Decompression
  • Sinus is then irrigated free of blood and Penrose
    drain inserted
  • Incisions are closed in layers, avoid closing the
    soft tissue layer of the lower eyelid to prevent
    ectropion
  • Procedures associated with the paranasal sinuses
    should use perioperative antibiotics
  • Inferior decompression alone gives a mean of 3.5
    mm reduction in proptosis, whereas combined
    antral and ethmoid decompression has been shown
    to produce a mean of over 5 mm reduction in
    proptosis

26
Inferior Orbital Decompression
27
Lateral Orbital Decompression
  • Approaches include coronal, direct rim incision,
    or extended lateral canthotomy
  • Periosteum over the lateral orbital rim is
    exposed and incised widely
  • It is elevated from the orbital side of the
    infratemporal fossa for approximately 3 to 3.5 cm
    posteriorly
  • Lateral orbital rim can be cut and mobilized
    leaving its attachment to the periosteum to
    assist with closure
  • Much of the lateral orbital wall can be removed
    (about 2.5 to 3.5 cm)
  • Periorbita is incised and fat teased out into
    newly created space

28
Lateral Orbital Decompression
29
Endoscopic Orbital Decompression
  • Medial and medioinferior floors of the orbit can
    be removed through a transnasal approach
  • Can not decompress the orbit lateral to the
    infraorbital nerve or extensively open the
    periorbita for extrusion of fat
  • May require a septoplasty for exposure
  • Uncinate process is taken down and a large
    antrostomy is created opening superiorly to the
    level of the orbital floor and inferiorly to the
    roof of the inferior turbinate
  • Middle turbinate is routinely resected
  • Ethmoidectomy is performed and the anterior and
    posterior ethmoid arteries are identified

30
Endoscopic Orbital Decompression
  • Medial orbital wall is expose from the fovea
    ethmoidalis to the anterior face of the sphenoid
    sinus
  • Trocar inserted through the canine fossa can
    allow visualization through the puncture while
    working through the nose
  • Infraorbital nerve is identified and mucosa
    elevated from the roof of the maxillary sinus
  • Lamina papyracea is fractured and removed to the
    level of the ethmoid arteries, bone removal is
    carried superiorly to within 2 mm of the fovea
    ethmoidalis, posteriorly to the face of the
    sphenoid, and laterally to the nerve

31
Endoscopic Orbital Decompression
  • A buttress of bone is preserved anteriorly at the
    juncture of the inferior and medial orbital walls
    to avoid excessive inferior displacement of the
    globe
  • Orbital periosteum is incised superiorly in a
    posterior to anterior direction with a sickle
    knife taking care to avoid excessive penetration
    with the knife
  • Orbital fat protrudes into the ethmoid cavity
  • Silastic splint is placed to avoid postoperative
    adhesions and packing is not used
  • Endoscopic approach allows a mean reduction of
    proptosis of 3 mm

32
Endoscopic Orbital Decompression
33
Orbital Fat Removal
  • Recently proposed as alternative to decompression
    surgery
  • Utilizes subciliary and upper lid crease
    incisions
  • Fat compartments are debulked from upper and
    lower lids similar to a blepharoplasty
  • Must achieve excellent hemostasis, usually with
    bipolar cautery
  • As much as 6 mm of proptosis reduction can be
    achieved with this approach

34
Treatment Options
35
Complications
  • If allowed to progress unchecked, patients can
    develop progressive optic neuropathy which can
    lead to blindness
  • Major complications of medical management is the
    failure to recognize a medical failure and to
    delay surgery
  • Steroid therapy complications - gastric ulcer,
    irritable personality, reactivation of dormant
    infection
  • Radiation complications - cataracts, pituitary
    suppression, and optic fibrosis
  • Decompression surgery - diplopia, unsatisfactory
    result, corneal abrasion, excessive retraction on
    the globe, retrobulbar hematoma, injury to
    infraorbital nerve, ectropion, retinal hemorrhage
    (diabetic patient), and orbital cellulitis

36
Complications
37
Emergencies
  • Retrobulbar hematoma, retinal vascular occlusion,
    and corneal ulcer are the major sight threatening
    emergencies
  • Retrobulbar hematoma is treated with opening of
    skin incisions and evacuating the clot
  • Retinal vascular occlusion is related to
    increased intraocular pressure and is an
    ophthalmologic emergency
  • Patient should be maintained on appropriate eye
    protection to avoid corneal ulceration
  • Patient should be warned to seek immediate
    medical attention for increasing pain in the eye
    or for decreasing vision
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