Surgical implications of frontoethmoidal pneumosinus dilatans-associated proptosis caused by meningioma.

Journal: Acta Neurochirurgica
Published:
Abstract

Pneumosinus dilatans (PSD) involves paranasal sinus enlargement without radiologic evidence of localized bone destruction, hyperostosis, or mucous membrane thickening. We discuss the surgical implications of PSD-associated proptosis in patients with anterior skull-base meningioma. A 20-year-old man with proptosis, hypoglobus, and lateral globe displacement had WHO grade I anterior skull-base and orbital meningiomas. Aggressive resection using anterior/medial orbitotomy and an anterior interhemispheric skull-base approach achieved Simpson grade I resection. Postoperatively, his symptoms improved, with no recurrence at 2-year follow-up. Although PSD-associated proptosis is relatively uncommon, it carries important clinical implications in surgical management of skull-base and orbital meningiomas.

Authors
Amol Raheja, Hussam Abou Al Shaar, Bhupendra Patel, William Couldwell
Relevant Conditions

Meningioma