Periocular granuloma annulare, nodular type. Occurrence in late middle age
M. A. Burnstine, J. T. Headington, D. M. Reifler, J. H. Oestreicher and V. M. Elner
Department of Ophthalmology, W. K. Kellogg Eye Center.
We describe the two oldest individuals with nodular granuloma annulare
(pseudorheumatoid nodules) in the ophthalmologic literature and propose a
unified classification scheme that recognizes pseudorheumatoid nodules to
be granuloma annulare, nodular type. All lesions in both cases revealed
so-called necrobiotic granulomas, characterized by an acellular central
area containing mucin (hyaluronic acid) surrounded by palisading
histiocytes (macrophages), diagnostic of granuloma annulare. These features
are identical to those reported in the ophthalmologic and older general
pathology literature as pseudorheumatoid nodules and the contemporary
general and dermatologic pathology literature as granuloma annulare. We
believe the diagnosis of nodular granuloma annulare should be employed for
necrobiotic lesions displaying distinctive clinicopathologic features to
unite the ophthalmologic, general, and dermatologic pathology literature.
Granuloma annulare, nodular type, must also be considered in the
differential diagnosis of ocular and periocular lesions at any age.