“…They originate from the arachnoid that covers the sellar tubercle, sphenoid plane and chiasmatic groove. They are slow-growing lesions, and whose symptoms become evident when they cause compression of the structures adjacent to the lesion, with the ones located before them being the most involved, that is, those that pertain to the optic chiasm and optic nerve, that is why bitemporal hemianopsia, associated with optic atrophy represent the most frequently found clinical presentation, among the neuro-ophthalmological clinical findings [1,2,3,4,5], because the only route for the extension of the tumor is anterior, on the sphenoid plane, on the optic nerves or between the chiasm around the anterior cerebral artery complex. [6,7,8].…”