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Surg Neurol Int ; 10: 7, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30775061

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Optic chiasm invasion by a craniopharyngioma (CP) is exceptional. Surgical treatment of intrachiasmatic CPs associates a high risk of chiasm injury, which should be properly addressed before surgery. CASE DESCRIPTION: We present a 46-year-old woman admitted to the hospital with low visual acuity (0.1 in the right eye and 0.5 in the left) and a severe defect in her visual fields, in addition to headaches, diabetes insipidus, and a long-term depressive disorder. Her visual deficit progressed from a right homonymous temporal inferior quadrantanopia to an almost complete loss of vision in both eyes that only spared the upper nasal quadrants. Brain MRI showed a rounded third ventricle tumor with a potbelly expansion of the optic chiasm, suggesting chiasm invasion by the tumor. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) showed the thinning of the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) in the superior and temporal wedges of the right eye and in the temporal wedge of the left one. The tumor was completely removed by employing a frontotemporal craniotomy and a translamina terminalis approach. Histological analysis showed a squamous-papillary CP. Postoperatively, a significant worsening of the visual defect was evidenced on the perimetry, which was related to a marked RNFL atrophy measured with OCT, as compared to the preoperative study. The poor long-term visual outcome in this patient correlated well with the results of postoperative OCT. CONCLUSIONS: Preoperative analysis of retinal atrophy with optic coherence tomography allows a reliable assessment of the patient's visual outcome in CPs involving the optic chiasm.

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