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A possible new etiology for ophthalmic varicose veins: disseminated intracranial hyperostosis

  • Autores: Félix Jesús de Paz Fernández, Josep Maria Potau Ginés, Isabel San José Crespo, Marta González, Mercedes Barbosa Cachorro, Natividad García Atarés
  • Localización: European Journal of anatomy, ISSN-e 1136-4890, Vol. 22, Nº. 4, 2018, págs. 371-373
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • We wanted to see if cranial anatomical alterations could influence the vascularization of the eyeball, particularly in the production of ophthalmic varicose veins. Orbital dissection of 85 years old woman (who suffered from Alzheimer’s disease and respiratory failure).We observed, when performing a horizontal section of the skull to access the roof of the orbit, that the intracranial surface of the anterior and middle cranial fossae was partially covered by bony outgrowths, with the optical aperture and superior orbital fissure included. Also, when removing the roof of the orbits and beginning to extract the orbital fat we saw a dark, bilateral mass in the upper part of the orbital cavity corresponding to very dilated vessels. Bone alteration of the internal face of the skull was a diffuse intracranial hyperostosis and the dark dilated masses were superior ophthalmic varicose veins.Our hypothesis is that the origin of these ophthalmic varicose veins was the narrowing of the superior orbital fissure due to excessive bone proliferation. Intracranial hyperostosis produces a difficulty in draining orbital venous blood and, consequently, venous dilation. For this reason, we should consider this in the differential diagnosis.


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