It's Always Been Like That - Abstract

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Identifier walsh_2018_s3_c2-1
Title It's Always Been Like That - Abstract
Creator Eric Gaier; William Butler; Joseph Rizzo
Affiliation (EG) (JR) Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, Massachusetts; (WB) Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts
Subject Papilledema; Intracranial Tumors; Pediatric; Headaches; Ptosis
History An 18 year-old Caucasian boy presented with left upper eyelid ptosis, headaches, and iris heterochromia. The patient and his family reported the left iris being darker than the right since early childhood. Over the 5 years preceding his presentation, the patient's mother noted progressive ptosis of his left upper eyelid. A top student in middle school, his grades had declined through high school, and his family had noticed loss of motivation mixed with intermittent irritability and mood changes. The patient developed headaches 2 years prior that had been worsening steadily and culminated over the preceding week in severity with daily episodes of nausea and vomiting. He noticed increased thirst and voiding frequency and had felt fatigued. He gained 25 lbs in the preceding 3 months. The patient was initially prescribed sumatriptan and cyproheptadine for presumed migraines without symptomatic benefit. In the week prior to presentation, the left side of his face began to droop and he developed binocular, horizontal diplopia. A CT head was abnormal, and the patient was referred for evaluation and admission. External examination revealed ptosis of the left upper eyelid and slate grey circumferential coloration of the sclera (Figure 1). The right iris was hazel, and the left was dark brown. The pupils were equal and reactive without a relative afferent defect. Visual acuities were 20/20 OU without dyschromatopsia or metamorphopsia. Abduction of the left eye was mildly limited, and there was subtle left facial weakness. Automated visual field testing showed enlarged blind spots bilaterally. Funduscopic examination was significant for papilledema with peripapillary flame hemorrhages OU and a striking interocular diffuse choroidal pigmentation disparity with the left eye being darker than the right (Figure 2). The patient was treated with corticosteroids with improvement of his headache and resolution of diplopia. A diagnostic procedure was performed.
Disease/Diagnosis Primary central nervous system melanoma, likely leptomeningeal, in association with Nevus of Ota
Presenting Symptom An 18 year-old Caucasian boy presented with left upper eyelid ptosis, headaches, and iris heterochromia. The patient and his family reported the left iris being darker than the right since early childhood. Over the 5 years preceding his presentation, the patient's mother noted progressive ptosis of his left upper eyelid. A top student in middle school, his grades had declined through high school, and his family had noticed loss of motivation mixed with intermittent irritability and mood changes. The patient developed headaches 2 years prior that had been worsening steadily and culminated over the preceding week in severity with daily episodes of nausea and vomiting. He noticed increased thirst and voiding frequency and had felt fatigued. He gained 25 lbs in the preceding 3 months. The patient was initially prescribed sumatriptan and cyproheptadine for presumed migraines without symptomatic benefit. In the week prior to presentation, the left side of his face began to droop and he developed binocular, horizontal diplopia. A CT head was abnormal, and the patient was referred for evaluation and admission. External examination revealed ptosis of the left upper eyelid and slate grey circumferential coloration of the sclera (Figure 1). The right iris was hazel, and the left was dark brown. The pupils were equal and reactive without a relative afferent defect. Visual acuities were 20/20 OU without dyschromatopsia or metamorphopsia. Abduction of the left eye was mildly limited, and there was subtle left facial weakness. Automated visual field testing showed enlarged blind spots bilaterally. Funduscopic examination was significant for papilledema with peripapillary flame hemorrhages OU and a striking interocular diffuse choroidal pigmentation disparity with the left eye being darker than the right (Figure 2). The patient was treated with corticosteroids with improvement of his headache and resolution of diplopia. A diagnostic procedure was performed.
Date 2018-03
References 1. Cuisset L, Jeru I, Dumont B, et al, Mutations in the autoinflammatory cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome gene: epidemiological study and lessons from eight years of genetic analysis in France, Ann Rheum Dis,70:495-9, 2011. 2. Kuemmerle- Deschner JB, Ozen S, Tyrrell PN, et al, Diagnostic criteria for cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome, Ann Rheum Dis, Jun;76(6):942-947, 2017. 3. Kullenberg T, Lofqvist M, Leinonen M, et al, Long-term safety profile of anakinra in patients with severe cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes, Rheumatology, Aug;55(8): 1499-506, 2016. 4. Lachmann HJ1, Kone-Paut I, Kuemmerle-Deschner JB, et al, Use of canakinumab in the crypopyrin-associated periodic syndrome. N Engl J Med, Jun 4;360(23):2416-25, 2016. 5. Aróstegui JI1, Lopez Saldaña MD, Pascal M,et al, A somatic NLRP3 mutation as a cause of a sporadic case of chronic infantile neurologic, cutaneous, articular syndrome/neonatal-onset multisystem inflammatory disease: Novel evidence of the role of low-level mosaicism as the pathophysiologic mechanism underlying mendelian inherited diseases. Arthritis Rheum, Apr;62(4):1158-66, 2016
Language eng
Format application/pdf
Type Text
Source 2018 North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society Annual Meeting
Relation is Part of NANOS Annual Meeting Frank B. Walsh Sessions; 2018
Collection Neuro-Ophthalmology Virtual Education Library: Walsh Session Annual Meeting Archives: https://novel.utah.edu/Walsh/
Publisher North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society
Holding Institution Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah
Rights Management Copyright 2018. For further information regarding the rights to this collection, please visit: https://NOVEL.utah.edu/about/copyright
ARK ark:/87278/s6158kmp
Setname ehsl_novel_fbw
ID 1320250
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6158kmp