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Orbital Lymphangioma (Lymphatic Malformation)

A benign orbital lymphatic malformation, present from birth, that can enlarge suddenly with infection or bleed into a chocolate cyst — causing proptosis that can threaten vision.

Medically reviewed by EyePlastics Medical Editorial BoardASOPRS oculoplastic surgeonsLast updated June 2026

Orbital Lymphangioma (Lymphatic Malformation)

An orbital lymphangioma — more precisely called a lymphatic malformation — is a benign, non-cancerous tangle of abnormal lymphatic channels inside the eye socket. It is present from birth, most often becomes apparent in childhood, and behaves unpredictably: it can stay quiet for long periods, then suddenly enlarge, especially during an upper respiratory infection or if it bleeds internally. Because it sits within the confined space of the orbit, even a benign lesion can push the eye forward and threaten vision when it expands.

This is a focused companion to our Orbital Tumors guide and our Pediatric Orbital Tumors guide, where lymphatic malformation is one of the more common childhood orbital masses.

How It Behaves

A lymphatic malformation is made of thin-walled lymphatic (and often small blood) channels that do not connect normally to the circulation. This structure explains its two characteristic patterns:

  • Sudden enlargement — the lesion can swell during a viral illness, when lymphatic tissue throughout the body becomes active
  • Spontaneous bleeding — a channel can bleed and form a "chocolate cyst" (a pocket of old blood), causing rapid proptosis (bulging of the eye) over hours to days

Between these episodes the lesion may be stable and cause few symptoms. This on-again, off-again course is a hallmark that helps distinguish it from other orbital masses.

Signs and Symptoms

Depending on size and location, an orbital lymphatic malformation can cause:

  • Proptosis — forward bulging of the eye, sometimes sudden
  • Eyelid swelling or a bluish fullness
  • Double vision or limited eye movement
  • In severe expansion, pressure on the optic nerve — the vision-threatening emergency

In any child with proptosis, the priority is to distinguish a benign lesion like this from the mimics that demand urgent action — particularly orbital cellulitis (an infection) and rhabdomyosarcoma (the most common orbital cancer of childhood). Imaging and specialist evaluation sort these out.

Diagnosis

Diagnosis relies on imaging — MRI is especially useful for showing the cystic, multi-compartment structure and any fluid-fluid levels from prior bleeding that are characteristic of a lymphatic malformation. Imaging also maps how the lesion wraps around the eye, muscles, and optic nerve, which is essential for planning any intervention.

Treatment

Because these lesions infiltrate around delicate orbital structures rather than forming a neat, removable ball, treatment is deliberately conservative and tailored:

  • Observation for small, stable, asymptomatic lesions
  • Sclerotherapy — injecting an agent that collapses the abnormal channels — increasingly a first-line treatment for accessible cystic components
  • Surgical debulking — carefully removing or draining the lesion when it threatens vision or causes disfiguring proptosis; complete removal is usually not possible because the channels weave through normal tissue
  • Urgent drainage of an acute hemorrhagic cyst that is compressing the optic nerve

Care is often shared between an oculoplastic/orbital surgeon and an interventional specialist, and the plan is matched to the child's symptoms and the lesion's behavior over time.

When to See a Specialist

Any bulging of a child's eye — particularly if it comes on suddenly or fluctuates with colds — warrants prompt orbital evaluation. An ASOPRS-trained oculoplastic surgeon working with pediatric and imaging specialists can confirm the diagnosis and guide treatment that protects the eye and vision.

A bulging or fluctuating eye in a child needs orbital expertise

Orbital lymphatic malformations are benign but unpredictable — specialist evaluation protects vision. Find an ASOPRS-trained oculoplastic surgeon near you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is an orbital lymphangioma cancer?
No — it is a benign lymphatic malformation. But because it sits in the confined orbit and can enlarge suddenly or bleed, even a benign lesion can push the eye forward and, rarely, threaten vision.
Why does it swell when my child gets a cold?
Lymphatic tissue throughout the body becomes active during upper respiratory infections, and a lymphatic malformation can enlarge along with it. It can also swell suddenly if a channel bleeds, forming a chocolate cyst.
Can it be completely removed?
Usually not — the abnormal channels weave through normal orbital tissue rather than forming a removable ball. Treatment is tailored: observation, sclerotherapy to collapse the channels, or surgical debulking when vision or appearance is threatened.

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