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Case Reports
. 2002 May;50(5):1129-31; discussion 1131-2.
doi: 10.1097/00006123-200205000-00033.

Visual field deficit caused by vascular compression from a suprasellar meningioma: case report

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Case Reports

Visual field deficit caused by vascular compression from a suprasellar meningioma: case report

Ghassan K Bejjani et al. Neurosurgery. 2002 May.

Abstract

Objective and importance: Suprasellar meningiomas typically cause bitemporal hemianopsia by direct compression of the chiasm, its blood supply, or both. We report another mechanism for visual loss in suprasellar meningiomas, whereby compression by the suprajacent vascular complex is the offending agent.

Clinical presentation: A 78-year-old woman with a suprasellar meningioma was diagnosed incidentally. During the follow-up period, she developed an inferior homonymous wedge defect consistent with superior compression, without any detectable radiological progression. It was decided to resect her tumor.

Intervention: The patient underwent a fronto-orbital approach for tumoral excision. Intraoperatively, a groove by the anterior cerebral artery complex was found along the superior surface of the chiasm. Postoperatively, the patient's visual deficit resolved.

Conclusion: This case illustrates an unusual visual field deficit associated with a suprasellar meningioma. It also emphasizes the importance of frequent and careful visual field monitoring, which can precede radiological and symptomatic progression.

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