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Query: UMLS:C0035412 (rhabdomyosarcoma)
6,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Orbital abnormalities encountered in the pediatric population differ substantially from those found in adult patients. Retinoblastoma, the most serious intraocular tumor, is often difficult to diagnose, but use of computed tomography (CT) (which reveals the characteristic focal calcification) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging allows this tumor to be differentiated from pseudogliomas, such as Coats disease, and retrolental fibroplasia. CT and MR imaging help in the differentiation of orbital cellulitis from preseptal, lacrimal, and eyelid infectious processes and of orbital pseudotumor from Graves disease. In cases of orbital trauma, CT is excellent for detecting orbital fractures and metallic foreign bodies; MR imaging is better for depicting ocular and optic nerve injuries. Both modalities allow the differentiation of rhabdomyosarcoma from dermoid, cavernous hemangioma, and lymphangioma and provide helpful information for the diagnosis of many other tumors. Since CT and MR imaging have widely expanded the capabilities of orbital imaging, it is more important than ever before for radiologists to understand pediatric orbital disease.
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PMID:CT and MR imaging of the pediatric orbit. 160 40

Orbital involvement by plasma cell tumours is rare. Orbital tumours do not generally present as an acute orbital inflammatory disease in adults, though tumours such as rhabdomyosarcoma may cause clinical signs similar to an acute orbital cellulitis in children. We describe a patient with bacterial orbital cellulitis and sinusitis who was found to have an extra-medullary plasmacytoma of the maxillary antrum and orbit and coexisting testicular seminoma.
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PMID:Solitary extramedullary plasmacytoma of the maxillary antrum and orbit presenting as acute bacterial orbital cellulitis. 185 2

We reviewed patient records of 99 consecutive orbital exenterations performed between 1969 and 1988. Patients ranged in age from 2 to 86 years (mean, 55.9 years). Classification of cases on histopathologic criteria showed 32 exenterations were performed for squamous cell carcinoma originating in the paranasal sinus (13), skin (12), conjunctiva (six), and lacrimal sac (one). Orbital exenteration was performed for treatment of other epithelial malignancy in basal cell carcinoma (eight), sebaceous carcinoma (six), adenoid cystic carcinoma (five), undifferentiated carcinoma (four), adenocarcinoma (two), intraepithelial carcinoma of the conjunctiva (two), benign mixed tumor (one), and transitional cell carcinoma (one). Exenterations were performed for melanoma of the conjunctiva (ten), nasosinus (three), skin (two), orbit (two), and choroid (one). Exenterations were also performed as treatment for mucormycosis (five), meningioma (three), fibrosarcoma (two), rhabdomyosarcoma (two), hemangiopericytoma (two), orbital cellulitis (one), fibrous histiocytoma (one), schwannoma (one), lymphangioma (one), benign lymphoepithelial lesion (one), and undifferentiated malignancy (one).
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PMID:A 20-year series of orbital exenteration. 195 84

Computer-assisted tomography (CAT) is superior to other roentgenographic modalities in evaluation of paranasal sinus lesions whenever extension into the orbit is suspected. CAT not only demonstrates the orbital involvement, its location, and extent, but also the nature of the sinus lesion. Conclusions based on 43 cases of paranasal sinus lesions with orbital involvement are presented. The entities include sinusitis and orbital cellulitis, mucocele, polyposis, ossifying fibroma, fibrous dysplasia, cylindroma, osteoblastoma, lymphoma, carcinoma, and rhabdomyosarcoma.
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PMID:Computer-assisted tomography: sinus lesions with orbital involvement. 736 84

Although orbital cellulitis is the most common cause of acute-onset proptosis with inflammatory signs in a child, the clinician should always be alert to the possibility of rhabdomyosarcoma. We describe an unusual presentation of acute-onset nonaxial proptosis of the left orbit without sinus disease or systemic toxicity in a 6-year-old boy. Our clinical differential diagnosis included orbital cellulitis, metastatic disease, capillary haemangioma, lymphangioma with cyst, ruptured dermoid cyst, and orbital rhabdomyosarcoma. Only after orbital biopsy and subsequent microbiologic confirmation were obtained was a diagnosis of chronic orbital abscess tenable. Features in our patient included paucity of symptoms and signs of inflammation. This case illustrates the difficulty in differentiating a chronic orbital infection from orbital rhabdomyosarcoma on the basis of clinical, laboratory, and orbital imaging findings. Possible causes of this unusual presentation are discussed.
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PMID:Orbital abscess masquerading as a rhabdomyosarcoma. 1104 Apr 85

A 7-week-old infant with sudden onset adduction deficit and proptosis is reported. The main differential diagnoses included orbital myositis, orbital cellulitis, capillary haemangioma and rhabdomyosarcoma. A CT scan revealed a postseptal cellulitis-like picture with thickening of the medial rectus muscle. He was given a course of antibiotics, withholding steroids and biopsy. His condition resolved completely on high-dose antibiotics alone. To our knowledge this is the youngest patient with infectious orbital myositis and postseptal cellulitis described in the literature. The clinical course emphasizes the importance of administering sufficiently high doses of antibiotics.
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PMID:Acute adduction deficit in a 7-week-old infant. 1266 Aug 49

Orbital rhabdomyosarcoma is the most common orbital malignancy of childhood with the common presentation of rapidly evolving unilateral proptosis. We studied six patients who were diagnosed and treated for rhabdomyosarcoma between January 1999 and June 2004. The age of the patients ranged from 4 to 29 years. Four patients presented with acute onset proptosis associated with signs of inflammation, mimicking orbital cellulitis. One patient presented with lid mass. Another patient presented with a soft, blind eye that was pushed superotemporally by a large inflammed, vascularised mass. Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma was the commonest histopathological type in our series found in five patients. One patient was completely cured with chemotherapy alone whereas two patients were treated with a combination of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Three patients in our series required exenteration.
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PMID:Orbital rhabdomyosarcoma: a case series. 1825 May 31