## Correct Answer: C. Thyroid ophthalmopathy Thyroid ophthalmopathy (Graves' ophthalmopathy) is the most common cause of bilateral proptosis in adults, particularly in middle-aged women. The key discriminator here is the **euthyroid state**—this is crucial because thyroid eye disease can occur independently of thyroid hormone levels. The pathophysiology involves autoimmune inflammation of the extraocular muscles and orbital fat, mediated by TSH receptor antibodies. This leads to muscle hypertrophy and edema, causing proptosis, restriction of eye movements (especially upward gaze due to inferior rectus involvement), and chemosis. The bilateral presentation and absence of systemic toxicity (euthyroid status) rule out acute orbital cellulitis. While thyroid ophthalmopathy is classically associated with hyperthyroidism, approximately 10–15% of cases occur in euthyroid or hypothyroid patients, making euthyroid status a common NBE trap. The clinical triad of bilateral proptosis, ophthalmoplegia, and chemosis in a euthyroid patient is pathognomonic for thyroid eye disease. Indian guidelines and clinical practice recognize this as the most frequent cause of adult-onset proptosis in India, particularly in women aged 40–60 years. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Orbital cellulitis** — Orbital cellulitis is acute, unilateral, and presents with fever, pain, and systemic toxicity. It is caused by bacterial infection and would show elevated inflammatory markers. The bilateral, painless, chronic presentation with chemosis and ophthalmoplegia in a systemically well patient excludes cellulitis. Additionally, cellulitis does not cause restriction of upward gaze in the pattern seen with thyroid eye disease. **B. Orbital pseudotumor** — Orbital pseudotumor (idiopathic orbital inflammation) is typically unilateral and presents acutely with pain, proptosis, and vision loss. While it can cause ophthalmoplegia and chemosis, bilateral presentation is rare. Pseudotumor is a diagnosis of exclusion and would require imaging and biopsy to rule out lymphoma and other conditions. Thyroid ophthalmopathy is far more common and explains the bilateral findings without requiring exclusionary investigations. **D. Orbital lymphoma** — Orbital lymphoma typically presents unilaterally with a palpable mass, painless proptosis, and ophthalmoplegia. While bilateral presentation can occur, it is uncommon and usually associated with systemic lymphoma. Lymphoma does not typically cause the symmetric bilateral muscle involvement and chemosis pattern characteristic of thyroid eye disease. The euthyroid status and absence of systemic B symptoms further argue against lymphoma. ## High-Yield Facts - **Thyroid ophthalmopathy occurs in 10–15% of euthyroid patients**—do not exclude based on normal thyroid function alone. - **Bilateral proptosis + ophthalmoplegia + chemosis = thyroid eye disease** until proven otherwise in middle-aged women. - **Inferior rectus is the most commonly affected muscle** in thyroid ophthalmopathy, causing restriction of upward gaze and vertical diplopia. - **TSH receptor antibodies (TRAb)**, not thyroid hormone levels, drive orbital inflammation—explains euthyroid presentation. - **Most common cause of adult-onset proptosis in India**—more frequent than lymphoma, pseudotumor, or cellulitis in this demographic. ## Mnemonics **GRAVES = Graves' Ophthalmopathy Features** **G**oiter (may be absent), **R**estrictive ophthalmoplegia, **A**utoimmune (TSH-R antibodies), **V**ision loss (compressive), **E**xophthalmos (bilateral), **S**ystemic euthyroid state possible. Use when differentiating bilateral proptosis causes. **EOM Involvement in Thyroid Eye Disease** **Inferior > Medial > Superior > Lateral**—order of extraocular muscle involvement by frequency and severity. Inferior rectus hypertrophy causes upward gaze restriction and vertical diplopia, the hallmark finding. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs euthyroid status with thyroid ophthalmopathy to trap students who memorize only the hyperthyroid-Graves' association. The question tests whether candidates know that **thyroid eye disease is an autoimmune phenomenon independent of thyroid hormone levels**—approximately 10–15% of cases are euthyroid or hypothyroid. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, a middle-aged woman presenting with bilateral proptosis and normal TSH should trigger immediate suspicion for thyroid ophthalmopathy and TRAb testing, even if thyroid function is normal. This distinction prevents unnecessary orbital imaging and antibiotics, and allows early immunosuppressive therapy to prevent vision-threatening complications like compressive optic neuropathy. _Reference: Robbins Ch. 24 (Endocrine System); Harrison Ch. 405 (Thyroid Disorders); Bailey & Love Ch. 52 (Orbit)_
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