Unilateral congenital dacryocele

We report a case of a healthy, full term, 3 months old boy, who was referred for evaluating a bluish-gray cystic mass, measuring approximately 1-cm just below the medial canthal tendon of the right eye, present since birth. The diagnosis of unilateral congenital dacryocele was confirmed by CT-scan....

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Main Author: Narjisse Taouri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAMJ 2020-06-01
Series:PAMJ Clinical Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access: https://www.clinical-medicine.panafrican-med-journal.com/content/article/3/41/pdf/41.pdf
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spelling doaj-841bc3ea7e16478aac091c37fa327b772020-11-25T03:44:26ZengPAMJPAMJ Clinical Medicine 2707-27972707-27972020-06-0134110.11604/pamj-cm.2020.3.41.2221322213Unilateral congenital dacryoceleNarjisse TaouriWe report a case of a healthy, full term, 3 months old boy, who was referred for evaluating a bluish-gray cystic mass, measuring approximately 1-cm just below the medial canthal tendon of the right eye, present since birth. The diagnosis of unilateral congenital dacryocele was confirmed by CT-scan. In our case the dacryocele resolved after medical treatment which included: massage with warm compresses, antibiotics drops. We did not have recurrence over 10 months of follow-up. Previous studies have reported that congenital dacryocele, also known as nasolacrimal mucocele, is a rare form of congenital distension of the naso-lacrimal sac with both proximal and distal obstruction usually unilateral (approximately 25% are bilateral), and that is typically present at birth or in the first three months of life. Dacryoceles occur in 0.08% to 0.1% of newborns with congenital nasolacrimal duct obstruction as found by several authors, and patients may also have respiratory distress secondary to the intranasal cyst. The differential diagnosis reported in literature includes: encephalocele, capillary hemangioma, glioma and dermoid cyst. According to several studies the nasolacrimal mucocele can resolve spontaneously in majority of cases with medical treatment which includes antibiotics, warm compresses, and sac massage. However, surgical treatment may be necessary when self-resolution fails, to avoid infectious complication such as of dacryocystitis and preseptal cellulitis. https://www.clinical-medicine.panafrican-med-journal.com/content/article/3/41/pdf/41.pdf congenital dacryoceleintranasal cystdacryocystitis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Narjisse Taouri
spellingShingle Narjisse Taouri
Unilateral congenital dacryocele
PAMJ Clinical Medicine
congenital dacryocele
intranasal cyst
dacryocystitis
author_facet Narjisse Taouri
author_sort Narjisse Taouri
title Unilateral congenital dacryocele
title_short Unilateral congenital dacryocele
title_full Unilateral congenital dacryocele
title_fullStr Unilateral congenital dacryocele
title_full_unstemmed Unilateral congenital dacryocele
title_sort unilateral congenital dacryocele
publisher PAMJ
series PAMJ Clinical Medicine
issn 2707-2797
2707-2797
publishDate 2020-06-01
description We report a case of a healthy, full term, 3 months old boy, who was referred for evaluating a bluish-gray cystic mass, measuring approximately 1-cm just below the medial canthal tendon of the right eye, present since birth. The diagnosis of unilateral congenital dacryocele was confirmed by CT-scan. In our case the dacryocele resolved after medical treatment which included: massage with warm compresses, antibiotics drops. We did not have recurrence over 10 months of follow-up. Previous studies have reported that congenital dacryocele, also known as nasolacrimal mucocele, is a rare form of congenital distension of the naso-lacrimal sac with both proximal and distal obstruction usually unilateral (approximately 25% are bilateral), and that is typically present at birth or in the first three months of life. Dacryoceles occur in 0.08% to 0.1% of newborns with congenital nasolacrimal duct obstruction as found by several authors, and patients may also have respiratory distress secondary to the intranasal cyst. The differential diagnosis reported in literature includes: encephalocele, capillary hemangioma, glioma and dermoid cyst. According to several studies the nasolacrimal mucocele can resolve spontaneously in majority of cases with medical treatment which includes antibiotics, warm compresses, and sac massage. However, surgical treatment may be necessary when self-resolution fails, to avoid infectious complication such as of dacryocystitis and preseptal cellulitis.
topic congenital dacryocele
intranasal cyst
dacryocystitis
url https://www.clinical-medicine.panafrican-med-journal.com/content/article/3/41/pdf/41.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT narjissetaouri unilateralcongenitaldacryocele
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