Translate this page into:
Vertical Strabismus and Positive Bielschowsky Head-Tilt Test: Atypical Presentation of a Maxillary Mucocele
Address for correspondence Filipe André Correia, MD, Otorrinolaringologia Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa Ocidental, Rua da Junqueira 126, 1349-019 Lisboa, Portugal (e-mail: filipe160490@gmail.com).
Abstract
Test of skew has become a cornerstone in the approach of a patient with vestibular symptoms but a detected vertical misalignment may be caused by an oculomotor disturbance and not a skew deviation. We report the case of an elderly patient with a 1-month history of dizziness and visual disturbance that revealed on bedside examination a spontaneous left head-tilt and a pathologic alternate cover test, with right eye hypertropia and excyclotorsion, worse with right head-tilt. Dizziness was assumed to have a visual origin with unrecognized binocular diplopia, caused by an acquired right eye superior oblique muscle palsy. However, imaging revealed a right maxillary mucocele that eroded the orbit floor into the orbit. The change of the intraorbital component of the maxillary fluid-filled mass with head-tilt through a dehiscent orbital floor may explain the findings of vertical strabismus and positive Bielschowsky head- tilt test in this case. Endoscopic treatment improved symptoms and findings.
Keywords
vertical strabismus
test of skew
superior oblique muscle palsy
skew deviation
Parks–Bielschowsky test
Introduction
Test of skew has become a cornerstone in the approach of a patient with vestibular symptoms, since the advent of the three-step bedside oculomotor exam (H.I.N.T.S.) and due to its high sensitivity in detecting acute posterior fossae disorders causing dizziness.1 However, a vertical misalignment detected may be caused by an oculomotor disturbance and not a skew deviation. This clinical report reviews the diagnostic approach and explains the physiopathology of a positive Bielschowsky head-tilt test caused by a maxillary mucocele.
Case Presentation
Eighty-one-year-old patient presented to the emergency department, with a clinical picture of dizziness and unspecific visual disturbance that has started and remained stable over the past month. Past medical history included controlled arterial hypertension and sinus surgery years ago. Bedside examination revealed a pathologic alternate cover test, with right eye hypertropia, worse with right head-tilt. A spontaneous left head-tilt was noted. Right eye excyclotorsion was detected in the fundoscopic examination. Prism and alternate cover test established a vertical misalignment of 14, 26, 6 prism diopters in centered, right, and left head-tilt positions, respectively. With no head-tilt, prism diopters were the same in right and left gaze. No other pathologic signs were detected.
Clinical history and physical examination, with right eye hypertropia and excyclotorsion and positive Bielschowsky head-tilt test, suggested an acquired fourth nerve palsy. Dizziness was assumed to have a visual origin with unrecognized binocular diplopia. The computed tomography (CT) scan showed a right eye subtle hypertropia, caused by a soft tissue density homogeneous mass with a maxillary sinus origin that eroded the orbit floor and had a relevant intraorbital component (►Fig. 1A and 1B). The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) confirmed the mass as a maxillary mucocele (►Fig. 1C and 1D). No posterior fossae disorders were detected on brain MRI. An endoscopic surgical approach to the mucocele was performed and dizziness and diplopia disappeared 1 week after treatment. ►Fig. 2 displays three-step Parks–Bielschowsky test before and 1 week after surgery. After 1 year of follow-up, there was no recurrence of disease and the patient remained asymptomatic.
An informed consent has been signed by the patient, agreeing with the completion and dissemination of the findings and its results.
Discussion
Vertical strabismus is an important sign to detect in the neu- rotology practice but differential diagnosis between fourth nerve palsy and skew deviation may be challenging. While skew deviation may represent an initial manifestation of a life-threatening brain stem stroke, an acquired isolated forth nerve palsy rarely represents an emergency. Parks–Bielschowsky three-step test2,3 has been described to differentiate them, but major drawbacks have been described. A positive Parks–Bielschowsky test, with increased hypertropia in contralateral gaze and ipsilateral head-tilt, while suggesting fourth nerve palsy, can also be present in patients with skew deviation.4,5 Besides, the complete three-step test fails to detect 30% of superior oblique muscle palsy cases, suggesting that a combination of a positive first and third steps may be more helpful.4 The upright-supine test, highly specific in chronic findings,6 has been proved unuseful in the acute and subacute context.7 In this setting, indirect ophthalmoscopy can help differentiating the two conditions, by measuring the cyclotorsion of the hypertropic eye: typically, the hypertropic eye is excyclotorted in fourth nerve paly and incyclotorted in skew deviation.8
In the reported case, the right eye excyclotorsion and hypertropia, evident on alternate cover test, increased with right head-tilt. The patient presented with a spontaneous left head-tilt and no other neurologic signs were detected. Thus, an acquired cyclovertical muscle palsy was suspected. In literature, there are some reports of extraocular muscle lesions after open and endoscopic sinus surgery, including cyclovertical muscle palsies.9,10 An acquired right superior oblique muscle palsy was considered and, as there was no history of recent trauma,11,12 the patient underwent brain and orbit CT and MRI scans, that showed a maxillary mucocele with an intraorbital component.
The distinguishing feature in this case was the positive Bielschowsky test. In a fourth nerve palsy, this sign is caused by a deficitary incyclotorsion of the superior oblique muscle during ocular counterrolling that is replaced by the action of the ipsilateral superior rectus, increasing hypertropia during ipsilateral head-tilt.2
The probable explanation of this case's positive Biels- chowsky head-tilt test lies in the following facts: the intraorbital component caused a slight right eye hypertropia, mostly evident on alternate cover test; the inferior and medial pressure applied by the intraorbital mass to the right eye globe may explain excyclotorsion; with right head-tilt, the intraorbital component increased and the subsequent increase in pressure pushed the inferior surface of the right eye upward, increasing hypertropia; with left head-tilt, there was an increased pressure on lateral nasal wall, reducing hypertropia and eye torsion.
The patient referred no diplopia on left head-tilt, similar to symptoms relief with contralateral head-tilt in superior oblique muscle palsy; in both situations, spontaneous contralateral head-tilt is a compensatory mechanism to minimize the amount of their vertical strabismus and diplo- pia.3 Step 2 of Parks–Bielschowsky test did not reveal changes in right eye hypertropia because there was no change with gaze direction in the intraorbital volume of the mucocele and therefore in pressure. Normal superior oblique cross-sectional area on MRI and total resolution of symptoms and hypertropia after surgery confirmed the normal function of the extraocular muscles.
Conclusion
A maxillary fluid-filled mass may present with vertical strabismus and a positive Bielschowsky head-tilt test due to changes of the intraorbital component with head-tilt through a dehiscent orbital floor.
Conflict of Interest
None declared.
References
- H.I.N.T.S. to diagnose stroke in the acute vestibular syndrome-three-step bedside oculomotor exam more sensitive than early MRI DWI. Stroke. 2009;40(11):3504-3510.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Isolated cyclovertical muscle palsy. AMA Arch Opthalmol. 1958;60(6):1027-1035.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Lectures on motor anomalies. XI. Etiology, prognosis, and treatment of ocular paralyses. Am J Ophthalmol. 1939;22(7):723-734.
- [CrossRef] [Google Scholar]
- Sensitivity of the three-step test in diagnosis of superior oblique palsy. J AAPOS. 2014;18(6):567-571.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Understanding skew deviation and a new clinical test to differentiate it from trochlear nerve palsy. J AAPOS. 2010;14(1):61-67.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Ability of an upright-supine test to differentiate skew deviation from other vertical strabismus causes. Arch Ophthalmol. 2011;129(12):1570-1575.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Differentiating acute and subacute vertical strabismus using different head positions during the upright-supine test. JAMA Ophthalmol. 2018;136(4):322-328.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Skew deviation with ocular torsion: a vestibular brainstem sign of topographic diagnostic value. Ann Neurol. 1993;33(5):528-534.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Superior oblique palsy: a complication of endoscopic sinus surgery. J AAPOS. 2015;19(2):180-181.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Isolated inferior rectus muscle entrapment following endoscopic sinus surgery. Case Rep Otolaryngol. 2018;2018:4620510.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Adult hyper- tropia: a guide to diagnostic evaluation based on review of 300 patients. Eye (Lond). 2011;25(1):91-96.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Sudden-onset trochlear nerve palsy: clinical characteristics and treatment implications. J AAPOS. 2019;23(6):321.e1-321.e5.
- [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]