Abstract
Thyroid orbitopathy holds a dominant place in the list of causes for external ophthalmoplegia and is commonly accompanied by eye surface signs such as congestion, lacrimation, and proptosis. An elderly male presented to us with painless diplopia in the absence of proptosis, conjunctival congestion, tearing or irritative symptoms. He had bilateral complete external ophthalmoplegia. He was evaluated to have hypothyroidism with elevated anti-thyroid peroxidase antibodies. MRI revealed bulky extraocular muscles in a pattern of sparing of tendinous insertions, highly suggestive of thyroid orbitopathy. He was managed with IV steroid pulse and thyroxine supplementation with minimal improvement.Through this case report, we highlight an unusual presentation of thyroid eye disease in the form of isolated diplopia, in the absence of other usual eye signs. We also emphasize the characteristic typical neuroimaging signs, such as the ‘Coca Cola bottle’ sign, which strongly augments the diagnosis in an atypical setting.
Highlights
Thyroid orbitopathy is a rare condition, with a reported incidence of 2.9 to 16 per million population per year [1]
Thyroid orbitopathy holds a dominant place in the list of causes for external ophthalmoplegia and is commonly accompanied by eye surface signs such as congestion, lacrimation, and proptosis
A 65-year-old male presented with progressive binocular horizontal diplopia along with an inability to move his eyeballs in any direction for seven months which worsened on looking towards the right without a history of ptosis, fatigability, or diurnal fluctuation of symptoms
Summary
Thyroid orbitopathy is a rare condition, with a reported incidence of 2.9 to 16 per million population per year [1]. A 65-year-old male presented with progressive binocular horizontal diplopia along with an inability to move his eyeballs in any direction for seven months which worsened on looking towards the right without a history of ptosis, fatigability, or diurnal fluctuation of symptoms. He had no eyeball prominence, congestion, irritation, lacrimation, blurring of vision, or pain on eyeball movement. MRI brain (coronal section) T2/FLAIR sequence shows enlarged medial, superior, and inferior rectus muscle bellies (dashes arrows) This was consistent with the ‘Coca-Cola Bottle’ sign described in thyroid orbitopathy classically [4]. He was initiated on thyroxine supplementation and IV methylprednisolone pulse 500 mg per week for 12 weeks with which he showed minimal improvement
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