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Pearls & Oy-sters: Trigeminal Cystic Schwannoma Presenting With Foster Kennedy Syndrome, Sixth Nerve Palsy, and Focal Seizures.

Yasamin MahjoubMiranda WanSuresh Subramaniam
Published in: Neurology (2022)
Foster Kennedy syndrome refers to a finding of optic atrophy in one eye from direct compression of the optic nerve by a mass lesion and contralateral papilledema in the nonatrophic optic nerve caused by an increased intracranial pressure. When the fundoscopy finding is not due to a direct compressive mass, the term pseudo-Foster Kennedy syndrome is used; this can be caused by any process or processes that result in optic atrophy in one eye and optic disc edema in the other. Identifying Foster Kennedy syndrome in a patient calls for expedient neuroimaging looking for an intracranial mass lesion. In this article, we present the case of a patient presenting with vision loss and Foster Kennedy syndrome who was found to have a large trigeminal cystic schwannoma. While several other accompanying symptoms were not evident from the patient complaint, a careful history and physical examination revealed additional localizing clues: unilateral sensory changes in the face and pterygoid and masseter atrophy, unilateral cranial nerve VI palsy, and episodes of intense déjà vu sensation, which were presumed to represent temporal lobe-onset focal aware seizures. Trigeminal schwannomas are a rare entity, and they are even more rarely cystic. This case highlights an unusual scenario where a slow expansion of the tumor ultimately resulted in vision loss and presentation of the patient to medical attention.
Keyphrases
  • optic nerve
  • case report
  • optical coherence tomography
  • neuropathic pain
  • mental health
  • preterm infants
  • depressive symptoms
  • spinal cord
  • peripheral nerve