Mata Benign Eyelid Lesions(1)

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BENIGN EYELID LESIONS1. Nodules

• Chalazion

• Acute hordeola

2. Cysts

• Cyst of Moll• Cyst of Zeiss• Sebaceous cyst• Hidrocystoma

3. Tumours

Xanthelasma

• Viral wart• Keratoacanthoma• Naevi• Capillary haemangioma• Port-wine stain• Pyogenic granuloma• Cutaneous horn

Molluscum contagiosum•

Signs of chalazion (meibomian cyst)

Painless, roundish, firm lesion within tarsal plate

May rupture through conjunctiva and cause granuloma

Histology of chalazion

Multiple, round spaces previously containing fat with surrounding granulomatous inflammation

Epithelioid Multinucleated cells giant cells

Treatment of chalazion

Injection of local anaesthetic Insertion of clamp Incision and curettage

Acute hordeola

• Staph. abscess of meibomian glands

• Tender swelling within tarsal plate• May discharge through skin or conjunctiva

• Staph. abscess of lash follicle and associated gland of Zeis or Moll

• Tender swelling at lid margin

• May discharge through skin

Internal hordeolum ( acute chalazion )

External hordeolum (stye)

Molluscum contagiosum

• Painless, waxy, umbilicated nodule • Chronic follicular conjunctivitis

• May be multiple in AIDS patients • Occasionally superficial keratitis

Signs Complications

Histology of molluscum contagiosum

• Lobules of hyperplastic epithelium

• Circumscribed lesion• Surface covered by normal epithelium except in centre

• Intracytoplasmic (Henderson-Patterson) inclusion bodies• Deep within lesion bodies are small and eosinophilic• Near surface bodies are larger and basophilic

Xanthelasma

• Usually bilateral and located medially

• Common in elderly or those with hypercholesterolaemia• Yellowish, subcutaneous plaques containing cholesterol and lipid

• Translucent• On anterior lid margin

Cyst of Moll

• Similar to cyst of Moll • Not confined to lid margin

Eyelid cysts

• Opaque• On anterior lid margin

Cyst of Zeis

Eccrine sweat gland hidrocystoma

Sebaceous cyst

• Cheesy contents • Frequently at inner canthus

Viral wart (squamous cell papilloma)• Most common benign lid tumour• Raspberry-like surface

Pedunculated Sessile

Histology of viral wart

Finger-like projections of fibrovascular connective tissue

Epidermis shows acanthosis (increased thickness) and hyperkeratosis

Rete ridges are elongated and bent inwards

Seborrhoeic

• Common in elderly• Discrete, greasy, brown lesion• Friable verrucous surface• Flat ‘stuck-on’ appearance

Actinic

• Most common pre-malignant skin lesion• Rare on eyelids

• Affects elderly, fair-skinned individuals

• Flat, scaly, hyperkeratotic lesion

Keratoses

Keratoacanthoma

• Uncommon, fast growing nodule• Acquires rolled edges and keratin-filled crater

• Involutes spontaneously within 1 year

• Lesion above surface epithelium

• Central keratin-filled crater

• Chronic inflammatory cellular infiltration of dermis

Naevi• Appearance and classification determined by location within skin• Tend to become more pigmented at puberty

• Elevated

Intradermal

• May be non-pigmented

• No malignant potential

• Flat, well-circumscribed

• Low malignant potential

Junctional

• Has both intradermal and junctional components

Compound

• Pigmented

Capillary haemangioma

• Rare tumour which presents soon after birth

• Starts as small, red lesion, most frequently on upper lid

• Blanches with pressure and swells on crying

• Grows quickly during first year

• May be associated with intraorbital extension

• Begins to involute spontaneously during second year

Periocular haemangioma

• Steroid injection in most cases• Surgical resection in selected cases

• High-out heart failure

Treatment options

Occasional systemic associations

• Kasabach-Merritt syndrome - thrombocytopenia, anaemia and reduced coagulant factors

• Maffuci syndrome - skin haemangiomas, endrochondromas and bowing of long bones

Histology of capillary haemangioma

Lobules of capillaries Fine fibrous septae Lobules under high magnification

Port-wine stain (naevus flammeus)

• Rare, congenital subcutaneous lesion

• Segmental and usually unilateral

• Does not blanch with pressure

• Ipsilateral glaucoma in 30%

• Sturge-Weber or Klippel-Trenaunay-Weber syndrome in 5%

Associations

Progression of port-wine stain

Initially red and flat Subsequent darkening and hypertrophy of skin

Skin becomes coarse, nodular and friable

Pyogenic granuloma

• Usually antedated by surgery or trauma• Fast-growing pinkish, pedunculated or sessile mass• Bleeds easily

Cutaneous horn

• Uncommon, horn-like lesion protruding through skin• May be associated with underlying actinic keratosis or squamous cell carcinoma