ID | 45273 |
JaLCDOI | |
FullText URL | |
Author |
Himei, Kengo
Ishii, Keita
Nose, Soichiro
Mimura, Tetsushige
|
Abstract | An 18-year-old woman with a 2-year history of hypertension and headache was diagnosed with noradrenalin-secreting bilateral adrenal pheochromocytomas with paragangliomas in the background of von Hippel-Lindau disease with family histories and a missense mutation, 712C to T (Arg167Trp) in the VHL gene. She had optic disc hemangioma in the left eye which gradually enlarged and caused serous retinal detachment on the macula in one year. Low-dose external beam radiation (20 Gy) was administered to the left eye using a lens-sparing single lateral technique. She underwent craniotomy for cerebellar hemangioblastoma at the age of 22 years and total pancreatectomy for multiple neuroendocrine tumors at the age of 24 years. In the 6-year follow-up period after the radiotherapy, the optic disc hemangioma gradually reduced in size and its activity remained low, allowing good central vision to be maintained. External beam radiation is recommended as a treatment option for the initial therapy for optic disc hemangioma.
|
Keywords | retinal (papillary, optic disc) hemangioma
von Hippel-Lindau disease
pheochromocytoma
pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor
external beam radiation (radiotherapy)
|
Amo Type | Case Report
|
Publication Title |
Acta Medica Okayama
|
Published Date | 2011-04
|
Volume | volume65
|
Issue | issue2
|
Publisher | Okayama University Medical School
|
Start Page | 135
|
End Page | 141
|
ISSN | 0386-300X
|
NCID | AA00508441
|
Content Type |
Journal Article
|
language |
English
|
Copyright Holders | CopyrightⒸ 2011 by Okayama University Medical School
|
File Version | publisher
|
Refereed |
True
|
PubMed ID | |
Web of Science KeyUT |