Abstract

BackgroundWe report a rare case of sudden bilateral vision loss due to third ventricular cavernous angioma with intratumoral hemorrhage.Case presentationA 45-year-old woman presented decreased visual acuity in both eyes. Her best corrected visual acuity was 0.1 in the right eye and 0.15 in the left eye. Goldmann perimetry showed bilateral central scotomas and bitemporal visual field defects. MRI demonstrated a lesion with mixed hypo- and hyperintensity at the optic chiasm, which was thought to be an intratumoral hemorrhage. The patient underwent bifrontal craniotomy. The tumor was exposed via an anterior interhemispheric approach, and histological evaluation of the mass led to a diagnosis of cavernous angioma. Six months after the surgery, her best corrected visual acuity was 0.9 in the right eye and 0.9 in the left, with slight bitemporal visual field defects.ConclusionThird ventricular cavernous angioma is considered in the differential diagnosis of chiasmal syndrome. Contrast-enhanced MRI and FDG-PET might be useful for differential diagnosis of cavernous angioma from other chiasmal tumors including glioblastoma.

Highlights

  • We report a rare case of sudden bilateral vision loss due to third ventricular cavernous angioma with intratumoral hemorrhage.Case presentation: A 45-year-old woman presented decreased visual acuity in both eyes

  • Third ventricular cavernous angioma is considered in the differential diagnosis of chiasmal syndrome

  • We report a rare case of chiasmal syndrome with sudden bilateral vision loss due to third ventricular cavernous angioma presenting with intratumoral hemorrhage

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Summary

Conclusion

Third ventricular cavernous angioma is considered in the differential diagnosis of chiasmal syndrome.

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