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Uncommon chiasmal lesions: demyelinating disease, vasculitis, and cobalamin deficiency.

We report on eight patients who presented for evaluation of unexplained visual loss. They all showed a typical chiasmal visual field defect (bitemporal hemianopia, junction scotoma). In all patients, high-resolution computer-assisted tomographic (CT) scans of the sellar region were normal, and neither the medical history nor additional ophthalmological findings pointed to any explanation for the underlying disease. Six patients seemed to have suffered from chiasmal optic neuritis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans could elucidate the diagnosis in five cases: white-matter lesions typical of multiple sclerosis (MS) were found and, additionally, in four cases an enlargement of the chiasm or barrier defect was revealed in post-gadolinium MRI. In one patient, MRI was normal. He recovered completely after megadose steroid therapy. One patient developed motoric symptoms of MS during the following year, another patient had mild sensory symptoms and recurrence of severe optic neuritis. An MR-proven chiasmal lesion due to a leukocytoclastic immunovasculitis combined with small subcortical white-matter lesions was diagnosed in another patient. The field defects disappeared spontaneously. In a 28-year-old woman a low vitamin B12 level was found in routine blood samples. Parenteral vitamin B12 substitution led to an almost complete recovery of the visual field defects. Chiasmal optic neuritis may occur isolated or during the course of MS. Megadose steroids may be of value if contraindications have been ruled out. A chiasmal visual field defect caused by vitamin B12 deficiency is very uncommon. A similar case was reported in 1961.

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