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Metastatic Carcinoma of the Iris and Ciliary Body
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1958
Year
Gross AnatomySurgical OncologyWeight LossOphthalmologyOculoplasticsClinical Case ReportSurgical PathologyHistopathologyEar MoldingPathologyCiliary BodyClinical DiagnosisMetastatic CarcinomaOcular PathologyMedicineOrthopaedic SurgeryIll Negro Man
<h3>Introduction</h3> Metastatic carcinoma to the anterior ocular segment occurs infrequently. Middleton<sup>5</sup>in 1952 found 31 cases in the literature and added 2 cases of his own. Mayer and Ray<sup>4</sup>in 1955 added one more case, and Bonamour and Bonnet<sup>1</sup>in 1956 added the last-reported case, bringing the total of such cases to 35. The difficulties encountered in the clinical diagnosis of this condition plus the rarity of occurrence of the lesion itself prompts us to report the following four cases. <h3>Report of Cases</h3><h3>Case 1.</h3> —A 49-year-old Negro man entered a local hospital on Sept. 10, 1956, with the chief complaint of a constant cutting pain between his shoulder blades and sternum of four weeks' duration. There had been a weight loss of 30 lb. over an indefinite period. Initial examination revealed a malnourished, chronically ill Negro man. Positive findings included a lag on inspiration of the