Abstract
Thyroid eye disease (TED) is an autoimmune inflammatory disorder that affects the extraocular soft tissues and causes eyelid retraction, proptosis and restrictive extraocular myopathy. Compressive optic neuropathy from extraocular muscle enlargement occurs in less than 5% of patients, in the majority of whom it develops within 18 months of the diagnosis of hyperthyroidism. Vision loss from compressive optic neuropathy in patients with thyroid eye disease is usually bilateral and insidious in onset and progression and is associated with diplopia and elevated intraocular pressure. To our knowledge, there have been no reported cases of acute vision loss to the level of no light perception secondary to thyroid orbitopathy. The authors report a 66-year-old Caucasian male with history of long-standing thyroid eye disease and massive proptosis who progressed from mild compressive symptoms to no light perception within days, despite being clinically stable for over 10 years.