A systematic approach, linking both clinical and neuroimaging features, is important to facilitate the diagnostic workup of cerebral hemiatrophy. This may potentially help avoid large-scale investigations. Determining the underlying aetiology of cerebral hemiatrophy may impact treatment and prognostication as some conditions such as Rasmussen encephalitis and Parry-Romberg syndrome may benefit from timely implementation of immunomodulatory therapy.
Purpose:
Conventional computed tomography (CT) exophthalmometry requires an intact lateral orbital wall and is therefore not feasible in patients who have undergone any form of lateral orbital wall surgery where the normal bony landmark may be lost or displaced. The purpose of our study is to validate an alternative method of CT exophthalmometry utilizing the posterior clinoid (PC) process as a new reference point that will allow for reproducible comparison of the anterior-posterior globe position in the preoperative and postoperative settings.
Design:
Cohort study.
Methods:
This is a retrospective study of 48 patients with clinically diagnosed thyroid eye disease who had undergone cross-sectional CT imaging in the pre- or postoperative settings. CT exophthalmometry was performed using both the conventional interzygomatic method and our proposed PC process method on all pre- and postoperative CT imaging by two independent observers. Interobserver variability analysis was performed with intraclass correlation coefficient. Correlation and agreement between the two methods were analyzed with Pearson correlation coefficient and linear regression method. All analyses were conducted at 5% level of significance with Stata MP V14.
Results:
Interobserver variability analysis showed an intraclass correlation coefficient of >0.9 for both interzygomatic and PC methods. There is good correlation between the two different measurements observed in both the pre- and postoperative groups (r = 0.68 and r = 0.72, respectively, P < 0.001). Linear regression showed good agreement between the two different measurements with most of the points lying within the 95% limits.
Conclusions:
Our new method agrees well with the conventional method and has the added benefit of being able to reliably assess the anterior-posterior globe position in patients who do not have intact lateral orbital walls after decompressive surgery.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.