J Korean Ophthalmol Soc.  1999 Jan;40(1):287-292.

A Case of Sessile Papilloma Invading the Cornea

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Ophthalmology, St. Vincent`s Hospital, College of Medicine,The Catholic University of Korea.

Abstract

Papilloma invading the cornea is a benign tumor which needs differential diagnosis from malignant tumor and ocular surface squamous neoplasia. A sixty three year-old Korean female visited our hospital, complaining decreased visual acuity and a recurrent symptom of conjunctival irritation for one year. On her ocular examination the visual acuity of the right eye was 1.0 and that of the left, 0.7(noncorrectable). It was also found that the ocular surface mass, lying over the temporal and superior side of bulbar conjunctiva and invading 1/3 area of the corneal surface, clinically resembled that of ocular surface squamous neoplasia. A preoperative cytologic examination showed some clusters of epithelial cells without any dysplastic cell. The final diagnosis of a sessile papilloma invading the cornea was confirmed by a pathological examination after surgical excision. We present the above case with a brief review of literature for the first time in Korea.

Keyword

Cornea; Squamous neoplasia; Sessile papilloma

MeSH Terms

Conjunctiva
Cornea*
Deception
Diagnosis
Diagnosis, Differential
Epithelial Cells
Female
Humans
Korea
Papilloma*
Visual Acuity
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