Abstract
BACKGROUND Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) is a rare and uncontrolled proliferation of dendritic cells of myeloid origin. The incidence of LHC was estimated at 5 cases per million children ages 0-15 years old. The most common places for this tumor are the jaw, vertebra, pelvis, and the extremities. The disease with multisystem involvement can present a mortality rate of 20% and one-third of children have multisystem involvement. We present a case with unusual bone involvement of the anterior cranial base with a challenging diagnosis and a complex surgical approach. CASE REPORT We report the case of a 6-year-old boy who manifested the disease with daily holocranial headache, worse in the frontal region and refractory to analgesia for 10 days, strabismus homonymous, diplopia, and right palpebral ptosis. The tumor affected the sphenoid sinus, internal carotid artery, and sella turcica, and made contact with the pituitary gland. A joint surgery with Otorhinolaryngology and Neurosurgery was performed by nasal endoscopic access to the skull base by means of the right medial turbinectomy (for the access) and right sphenoid opening, septectomy and opening of the left sphenoid to work with 4 hands and, after resection of lesion, inside the sphenoid. CONCLUSIONS This patient had rare bone involvement from LCH and atypical clinical presentation next to the important and delicate structures of the anterior skull base, but had a satisfactory outcome.