Sight-threatening optic neuropathy is associated with paranasal lymphoma

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Abstract

Malignant lymphoma around the orbit is very rare. We present a rare case of optic neuropathy caused by lymphoma. A 61-year-old Japanese woman was referred to our hospital for evaluation of idiopathic optic neuropathy affecting her right eye. The patient was treated with steroid pulse therapy (methyl-predonisolone 1 g daily for 3 days) with a presumed diagnosis of idiopathic optic neuritis. After she had been switched to oral steroid therapy, endoscopic sinus surgery had been performed, which revealed diffuse large B cell lymphoma of the ethmoidal sinus. Although R-CHOP therapy was immediately started, prolonged optic nerve compression resulted in irreversible blindness. Accordingly, patients with suspected idiopathic optic neuritis should be carefully assessed when they show a poor response, and imaging of the orbits and brain should always be done for initial diagnosis because they may have compression by a tumor. © 2010 Hayashi et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd.

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APA

Hayashi, T., Watanabe, K., Tsuura, Y., Tsuji, G., Koyama, S., Yoshigi, J., … Takeuchi, S. (2010). Sight-threatening optic neuropathy is associated with paranasal lymphoma. Clinical Ophthalmology, 4(1), 143–146. https://doi.org/10.2147/opth.s8907

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