BMJ Neurology Open (Jan 2024)

Peculiar aetiology for orbital apex syndrome: Wyburn-Mason syndrome as orbital apex lesion

  • Pedro Braga-Neto,
  • Paulo Ribeiro Nobrega,
  • Lívio Leite Barros,
  • Pedro Lucas Grangeiro de Sá Barreto Lima,
  • Pedro Helder de Oliveira Júnior,
  • Daniel Aguiar Dias,
  • Carolina de Figueiredo Santos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjno-2023-000559
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1

Abstract

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Background Wyburn-Mason syndrome is a rare, non-hereditary congenital disease, belonging to the group of neurocutaneous syndromes with fewer than 100 cases reported since its first description in 1937.Case report A young adult man was initially evaluated at the age of 2 years for proptosis and progressive visual impairment of the right eye, followed by impairment in ocular abduction, adduction and elevation as well as amaurosis. MRI revealed an expansive formation centred in the right orbit compromising conal spaces with distortion of eye muscles and optic nerve. The lesion extended through the superior orbital fissure into the right cavernous sinus and to the contralateral orbit. Despite embolisation, proptosis and oedema of the periorbital tissue continued to worsen. The combination of facial, ocular and intracranial vascular malformations and the exclusion of alternative aetiologies led to a diagnosis of cerebrofacial arteriovenous metameric syndrome (CAMS) 1 (Wyburn-Mason syndrome).Discussion Important differential diagnoses are other CAMS, such as Sturge-Weber syndrome, as well as other conditions such as retinal cavernous haemangioma and vasoproliferative tumours. The optimal treatment regimen for severe cases of this syndrome is still unclear. Wyburn-Mason syndrome should be considered in patients presenting multiple arteriovenous malformations with orbital apex lesions.