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Pathology of the eyelid in elderly patients.
J Fr Ophtalmol.
2006 Jun;29(6):672-86.
OBJECTIVE: Didactic
review of the various features of eyelid pathology in elderly patients.
METHODS: Illustrated review centered on diagnosis of the usual aspects
and pitfalls of eyelid pathology divided into semiological chapters
(tumors, blisters, erythema, etc.). RESULTS: Pathology of the eyelids in
elderly patients is extremely polymorphic. It is mainly centered on skin
cancers (basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, adnexal
carcinomas, and melanoma). Most severe aspects of the inflammatory
diseases of the eyelid are bullous diseases (cicatricial pemphigoid,
pemphigus, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, etc.). A number of rare diseases
deserve mention since their presence could lead to the diagnosis of
internal or systemic diseases (dermatomyositis, necrobiotic
xanthogranuloma, Erdheim-Chester, etc.). In such conditions, early
diagnosis is often based on the observation of isolated periocular
symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Even though topographic dermatology is a somewhat
reductive vision of skin diseases, pathology of the eyelids deserves
special mention because of its polymorphism as well as its diagnostic
and/or therapeutic significance.
Malignant tumors of
the eyelid: a population-based study of non-basal cell and non-squamous
cell malignant neoplasms.Arch
Ophthalmol. 1998 Feb;116(2):195-8.
OBJECTIVE: To
determine the relative frequencies, average annual incidences, and
patient characteristics of non-basal cell and non-squamous cell
malignant neoplasms of the eyelid in a defined geographic population.
DESIGN and SETTING: A retrospective study using the Florida Cancer Data
System to identify malignant tumors of the eyelid, except for basal cell
and squamous cell carcinomas, from 1981 through 1994. Cases were limited
to persons who resided within Florida. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Incidence
of histologically confirmed malignant eyelid tumors. RESULTS: Two
hundred six primary malignant eyelid tumors were identified. The 3 most
common, in order of frequency, were melanoma, sebaceous carcinoma, and
lymphoma. The median age at diagnosis for all patients was 73 years.
Only 3 of the 206 malignant neoplasms occurred in blacks. The annual
incidence of eyelid melanoma and sebaceous carcinoma in whites older
than 20 years was 0.6 and 0.5 per million, respectively. Kaposi sarcoma
was the most common type of mesenchymal tumor. Eleven different
histologic types of lymphoma were found in the eyelid. Only 2 of 27
lymphomas had T-cell lineage. CONCLUSIONS: Malignant tumors of the
eyelid other than basal cell and squamous cell carcinoma are uncommon
and usually occur in elderly white persons. Primary eyelid tumors of any
type are rare in blacks. The risk of a non-basal cell and non-squamous
cell malignant neoplasm of the eyelid in Florida is 6.4 times greater
for whites than for blacks (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.1-20.2). A
variety of B-cell lymphomas can be manifested as primary eyelid tumors. |