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Page 1: Mata Benign Eyelid Lesions(1)

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•

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Signs of chalazion (meibomian cyst)

Painless, roundish, firm lesion within tarsal plate

May rupture through conjunctiva and cause granuloma

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Histology of chalazion

Multiple, round spaces previously containing fat with surrounding granulomatous inflammation

Epithelioid Multinucleated cells giant cells

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Treatment of chalazion

Injection of local anaesthetic Insertion of clamp Incision and curettage

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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)

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Molluscum contagiosum

• Painless, waxy, umbilicated nodule • Chronic follicular conjunctivitis

• May be multiple in AIDS patients • Occasionally superficial keratitis

Signs Complications

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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

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Xanthelasma

• Usually bilateral and located medially

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

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• 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

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

Pedunculated Sessile

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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Histology of capillary haemangioma

Lobules of capillaries Fine fibrous septae Lobules under high magnification

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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

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Progression of port-wine stain

Initially red and flat Subsequent darkening and hypertrophy of skin

Skin becomes coarse, nodular and friable

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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