Radiological Pitfalls in Patients with Inducible Dynamic Proptosis
Author(s) -
Sharon Morris,
JeanLouis deSousa,
Ian Francis,
Lekha Chandrasekharan,
Raman Malhotra
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
the open ophthalmology journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.67
H-Index - 19
ISSN - 1874-3641
DOI - 10.2174/1874364100802010091
Subject(s) - enophthalmos , medicine , radiological weapon , radiology , dynamic imaging , ophthalmology , nuclear medicine , diplopia , image processing , computer science , image (mathematics) , artificial intelligence , digital image processing
We report two patients presenting with marked clinical unilateral enophthalmos who had positional variability and dynamic proptosis on valsalva. On orbital imaging, enophthalmos was not documented and in fact, globe proptosis of the same side was reported for one of the patients. During CT and MRI scanning patients are often instructed to hold their breath to eliminate motion artefact. This may inadvertently induce dynamic proptosis. The radiological pitfalls of imaging patients with inducible dynamic proptosis and how to identify such patients are discussed.
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