Abstract

ObjectiveTo evaluate the causative and risk factors for optic neuropathy with mucocele via imaging studies. MethodsWe included 21 patients with rhinogenous optic neuropathy with mucocele. We collected data on the sinus involved, age, sex, number of days from the onset of visual impairment to surgery, and computed tomography (CT) imaging findings (bone defects in the lamina papyracea, Onodi cell mucocele, exophthalmos, and optic nerve deviation). The results were compared between two groups, the one having nine patients with pre-operative visual acuity of <0.1 (the poor group) and the other having 12 patients with pre-operative visual acuity of ≥0.1 (the fair group). Whether or not there was a difference in pre-operative visual acuity between patients with and without Onodi cell mucocele was determined. ResultsAfter surgery, visual acuity improved in 16/21 (76.2%) patients, and a correlation analysis showed a significant positive correlation between pre-operative and post-operative visual acuity. In imaging, the causative sinuses accounted for 85.7% of both posterior ethmoid and sphenoid sinuses. Bone defects of the lamina papyracea at the optic canal and the vertical downward deviation of the optic nerve at each location, especially in 6/9 patients with Onodi cell mucocele, were characteristic in the poor group. In these conditions, increasing the contact areas of the optic nerve and mucocele can leads to more chances of direct downward compression of the optic nerve and infection occurring, and it may lead to severe pre-operative visual impairment. ConclusionImaging studies of optic neuropathy with mucocele help to determine the risk factors and perform early and precise diagnostic imaging and decision-making for surgery.

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