| Nomenclatures of Morbihan disease | Lymphedema rosacea, solid persistent facial edema, morbus Morbihan, Morbihan syndrome (1, 3) |
| Prevalence | Rare (1, 3) |
| Age | Middle age (40 - 60 years old) (1, 3) |
| Sex | Both sexes (1, 3) |
| Ethnicity | Caucasian people, followed by Asian people (1) |
| Etiopathogenesis | The etiopathogenesis of Morbihan disease (MD) is still unknown. It may be due to lymphatic dysfunction, chronic cutaneous inflammation, or both (5-11). |
| Diagnosis | There are no specific criteria for diagnosis of MD. So, the diagnosis of MD is primarily based on clinical features, histopathology and imaging information (1, 3, 4, 6, 7). |
| Clinical presentations | In early stage, recurrent bilateral symmetrical pitting edema with insidious onset and progressive course on the upper two thirds of face (forehead, glabella, periorbital region, cheeks and nose) with or without erythema then persistent solid, non-pitting, asymptomatic edema. Later on, facial disfigurement and even visual field narrowing (1-3, 6, 10, 12, 13). |
| Histopathology | In early stage of MD, localized lymphedema, presence of dilated blood vessels, perivascular and perifollicular inflammatory infiltrations with lymphocytes, histiocytes, neutrophils, and mast cells. Then, dermal lymphatic vessel dilation, obstruction, and lymph drainage alterations. Later on, fibrotic induration and sometimes sarcoidal granulomas (6, 7). |
| Treatment | There are no controlled clinical studies on treatment of MD, because of the rarity of the disease; so, its management remains mainly empirical (1, 2, 17). |
| Systemic treatment | Doxycycline 200 mg daily for 3 - 6.5 months (1, 19). Isotretinoin (10 - 20 mg per day) alone or with ketotifen (1 mg two times per day) for 3 - 6 months has been recoded to be effective (20, 21). Others drugs as diuretics, thalidomide, metronidazole, systemic steroids, clofazimine (22-24). Recently, omalizumab was successful treatment for MD (25). |
| Local treatment | Long‐term intralesional injection of triamcinolone (every 4 - 6 weeks for 4 months) for resistant MD (26). Local lymphedema management as compression therapy, manual lymphatic drainage, and skin care (27, 28). |
| Surgical treatment | Surgical debulking eyelid mass with triamcinolone injections (9). Blepharoplasty (29). |
| Prognosis | Without treatment, MD is improbable to improve spontaneously (3, 30). |