Recurrent cavernous orbitocranial hemangioma. A clinical case and a literature review

Cavernous hemangioma of the orbit (CHO) is a vascular space-occupying lesion that develops as a result of an abnormal anlage of the vascular system and occurs in 70% of patients with vascular neoplasms of the orbit. CHO is more often considered as a venous malformation with slow blood flow, rather t...

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Main Authors: N. K. Serova, A. P. Trunova, N. N. Grigoreva, V. A. Cherkaev, V. V. Nazarov
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Real Time Ltd 2022-09-01
Series:Российский офтальмологический журнал
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Online Access:https://roj.igb.ru/jour/article/view/1062
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author N. K. Serova
A. P. Trunova
N. N. Grigoreva
V. A. Cherkaev
V. V. Nazarov
author_facet N. K. Serova
A. P. Trunova
N. N. Grigoreva
V. A. Cherkaev
V. V. Nazarov
author_sort N. K. Serova
collection DOAJ
description Cavernous hemangioma of the orbit (CHO) is a vascular space-occupying lesion that develops as a result of an abnormal anlage of the vascular system and occurs in 70% of patients with vascular neoplasms of the orbit. CHO is more often considered as a venous malformation with slow blood flow, rather than a benign tumor. Very rarely CHO spreads into the cranial cavity, usually through the upper orbital fissure and the optic canal. The recurrence of CHO after its complete removal is low, however no reliable data are available. It is supposed that CHO relapse can occur in three cases: the continued growth of an incompletely removed tumor, growth of an undiagnosed space-occupying formation, and the emergence of a new tumor. The purpose of the study is to present a clinical case of a multiple recurrence of orbitocranial cavernous hemangioma. The clinical case demonstrates such a recurrence after an incomplete CHO removal, which was manifested by exophthalmos and moderate oculomotor disorders. Special features of the clinical case also include CHO spread into the cranial cavity accompanied by a cavernous hemangioma of the brain structure.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2072-0076
2587-5760
language Russian
publishDate 2022-09-01
publisher Real Time Ltd
record_format Article
series Российский офтальмологический журнал
spelling doaj-art-e332a1b9911e4eca9daf5bcec0e29a4e2025-08-20T03:59:17ZrusReal Time LtdРоссийский офтальмологический журнал2072-00762587-57602022-09-0115313614010.21516/2072-0076-2022-15-3-136-140509Recurrent cavernous orbitocranial hemangioma. A clinical case and a literature reviewN. K. Serova0A. P. Trunova1N. N. Grigoreva2V. A. Cherkaev3V. V. Nazarov4N.N. Burdenko National Scientific and Practical Center for NeurosurgeryN.N. Burdenko National Scientific and Practical Center for NeurosurgeryN.N. Burdenko National Scientific and Practical Center for NeurosurgeryN.N. Burdenko National Scientific and Practical Center for NeurosurgeryN.N. Burdenko National Scientific and Practical Center for NeurosurgeryCavernous hemangioma of the orbit (CHO) is a vascular space-occupying lesion that develops as a result of an abnormal anlage of the vascular system and occurs in 70% of patients with vascular neoplasms of the orbit. CHO is more often considered as a venous malformation with slow blood flow, rather than a benign tumor. Very rarely CHO spreads into the cranial cavity, usually through the upper orbital fissure and the optic canal. The recurrence of CHO after its complete removal is low, however no reliable data are available. It is supposed that CHO relapse can occur in three cases: the continued growth of an incompletely removed tumor, growth of an undiagnosed space-occupying formation, and the emergence of a new tumor. The purpose of the study is to present a clinical case of a multiple recurrence of orbitocranial cavernous hemangioma. The clinical case demonstrates such a recurrence after an incomplete CHO removal, which was manifested by exophthalmos and moderate oculomotor disorders. Special features of the clinical case also include CHO spread into the cranial cavity accompanied by a cavernous hemangioma of the brain structure.https://roj.igb.ru/jour/article/view/1062cavernous hemangioma orbitorbitocranial cavernous hemangiomarecurrence
spellingShingle N. K. Serova
A. P. Trunova
N. N. Grigoreva
V. A. Cherkaev
V. V. Nazarov
Recurrent cavernous orbitocranial hemangioma. A clinical case and a literature review
Российский офтальмологический журнал
cavernous hemangioma orbit
orbitocranial cavernous hemangioma
recurrence
title Recurrent cavernous orbitocranial hemangioma. A clinical case and a literature review
title_full Recurrent cavernous orbitocranial hemangioma. A clinical case and a literature review
title_fullStr Recurrent cavernous orbitocranial hemangioma. A clinical case and a literature review
title_full_unstemmed Recurrent cavernous orbitocranial hemangioma. A clinical case and a literature review
title_short Recurrent cavernous orbitocranial hemangioma. A clinical case and a literature review
title_sort recurrent cavernous orbitocranial hemangioma a clinical case and a literature review
topic cavernous hemangioma orbit
orbitocranial cavernous hemangioma
recurrence
url https://roj.igb.ru/jour/article/view/1062
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AT aptrunova recurrentcavernousorbitocranialhemangiomaaclinicalcaseandaliteraturereview
AT nngrigoreva recurrentcavernousorbitocranialhemangiomaaclinicalcaseandaliteraturereview
AT vacherkaev recurrentcavernousorbitocranialhemangiomaaclinicalcaseandaliteraturereview
AT vvnazarov recurrentcavernousorbitocranialhemangiomaaclinicalcaseandaliteraturereview