Cases reported "Retinal Degeneration"

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1/233. Ocular changes in mucopolysaccharidosis iv A (Morquio A syndrome) and long-term results of perforating keratoplasty.

    BACKGROUND: The mucopolysaccharidoses (MPS) are an inhomogeneous group of disorders of errors in the carbohydrate metabolism with severe ocular involvement (corneal opacification, retinal degeneration, optic atrophy). PATIENT PRESENTATION: We report on a boy aged 12 years, with Morquio A (MPS IV A) syndrome. Ocular findings: progressive pseudoexophthalmus due to shallow orbits, increasing corneal stromal clouding, intermittent dissociated manifest nystagmus of the left eye, nyctalopia. visual acuity OD cc = 0.16, OS cc = 0.05. electrophysiology: changes suggesting a symptomatic tapetoretinal degeneration and optic atrophy. TREATMENT AND COURSE OF disease: OS: perforating keratoplasty. Postoperative improvement of visual acuity to 0.25 for nearly a year, followed by progressive reopacification of the corneal graft. Both eyes: progressive signs of tapetoretinal degeneration and optic atrophy. visual acuity now reduced to OD 0.05, OS 0.1. CONCLUSIONS: Success of a keratoplasty is limited by (1) reopacification of the cornea, (2) visual impairment due to (a) retinal degeneration and (b) optic atrophy. The indication for perforating keratoplasty has to be thought about very carefully in these multimorbid patients. In our patient, beside progressive visual impairment there is a progressive deafness which dominates his social and school life. Attending school is severely complicated by the double handicap. Perforating keratoplasty enabled the boy to attend a school for physically handicapped without a special low-vision care for another year. Progressive visual loss without further treatment options now renders optical and electronic low-vision aids necessary. Although the time of improved visual acuity lasted less than a year, we think patients with a life expectancy of less than 20 years should have every possible improvement of their situation - even if it does not last permanently. We therefore propose perforating keratoplasty in spite of insufficient long-term results.
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2/233. Focal retinal pigment epithelial dysplasia associated with fundus flavimaculatus.

    BACKGROUND: One or more focal dysplastic lesions of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) occurred in 15 eyes of 10 patients with fundus flavimaculatus. methods: review of patient records including an attempt to obtain follow-up information concerning a history of previous ocular trauma. RESULTS: Mild antecedent ocular trauma occurred to the eye with a dysplastic lesion in two patients. Dysplastic lesions were most frequently solitary and located temporal to the macula. Subretinal neovascularization accompanied two of the dysplastic lesions. The lesions were multifocal and present bilaterally in two patients. CONCLUSIONS: In fundus flavimaculatus, progressive lipofuscin storage is responsible for engorgement and hypertrophy of the RPE. Dysplastic lesions of the RPE probably result from reactive hyperplasia and fibrous metaplasia of RPE cells in response to acute disruption of fragile, hypertrophied RPE cells that may be enormously enlarged in the area of yellow flecks. This disruption may occur in response to trauma, focal inflammation, or other localized stimuli. patients with fundus flavimaculatus should be cautioned concerning the possible role of trauma in causing dysplastic changes in the RPE and visual loss.
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keywords = ocular
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3/233. Histopathological findings of X-linked retinoschisis with neovascular glaucoma.

    BACKGROUND: X-linked retinoschisis (XLRS) is rarely complicated by neovascular glaucoma. Only a few reports of XLRS histopathological findings with neovascular glaucoma have been published. methods: A 41-year-old man with XLRS complicated by neovascular glaucoma in his left eye was examined with electroretinography, B-scan, ultrasound biomicroscopy and computed tomography. He was examined by ophthalmoscopy and fluorescein angiography in the other eye. An enucleation was performed in his left eye due to uncontrollable high intraocular pressure and persistent ocular pain. We examined the enucleated eye histopathologically. RESULTS: Examination of the enucleated eye showed nuclear sclerosis of the lens, pigmented retrolental membrane and retinoschisis which separated the inner layer of the retina and made a large space in the vitreous cavity without any apparent detachment of the outer layers of the retina. Sclerotic vessels were present histopathologically in both the inner and outer layers of the retina. There was a peripheral anterior synechia, ectropion uveae and a fibrovascular membrane, which contained many lumina of neovascularization, indicating marked rubeosis iridis. Small cystic spaces were observed in both the schitic retina in the peripheral region and the foveal schisis at the outer layer of the retina. The photoreceptor cells had become markedly atrophied and multiple regions of calcification were observed. The optic nerve showed severe atrophy with gliosis, but the central retinal artery and vein were still open within the nerve. CONCLUSIONS: These histopathological findings suggest that rubeosis iridis may have developed secondarily to retinal ischemia due to occlusion of the retinal blood vessels.
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4/233. Progressive cone dystrophies.

    patients with progressive generalized cone dystrophy often present nystagmus (or strabism) and complain of photophobia, decrease in visual acuity or disturbances in colour perception. The most classic fundus abnormality is the bull's eye maculopathy or a pallor of the optic disc. Minimal macular changes are sometimes seen, which may progress to a bull's eye type of macular degeneration. The photopic ERG is always very affected, whereas at first the scotopic ERG seems normal. Progressive deterioration of the visual functions is accompanied by increasing fundus lesions and rod involvement, as suggested by the modifications of the dark adaptation curve and the scotopic ERG. However, the progression of typical generalized cone dysfunction is very slow. On the contrary, in some cases of so-called Stargardt's disease with peripheral participation, a very rapid progression has been observed. In such cases a normal ERG does not necessarily mean that the disease will remain localized to the macular area. No definite prognosis can be made on one single ERG. In 3 cases with sector pigmentary retinopathy the photopic ERG was more affected than the scotopic ERG. However, these cases are probably primary cone-rod dystrophies. Although there is no electrophysiological control, our clinical impression is that the evolution, if possible, is very slow.
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ranking = 64.69443240506
keywords = dystrophy
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5/233. indocyanine green angiography in Sorsby's fundus dystrophy.

    PURPOSE: To report the indocyanine green angiographic findings in patients with a fundus dystrophy characterized by subretinal deposits, macular atrophic or neovascular degeneration and peripheral chorioretinal atrophy which is most likely Sorsby's fundus dystrophy. methods: A series of 11 clinically affected patients and 4 asymptomatic carriers, belonging to one autosomal dominant pedigree were examined with stereoscopic funduscopy, fluorescein and indocyanine green angiography. RESULTS: Subretinal deposits were found in 20 eyes of 10 patients. These deposits stained slightly on indocyanine green angiography, causing a reticular pattern. Two eyes had a disciform lesion and 3 geographic atrophy in the macula. A peripheral disciform lesion was found in 1 eye. indocyanine green angiography identified peripapillary choroidal neovascularization in 2 eyes. Peripheral chorioretinal atrophy was found in 8 eyes of 4 patients, associated with peripheral plaques that could only be identified by indocyanine green angiography in 6 eyes of 3 patients. CONCLUSION: indocyanine green angiography in Sorsby's fundus dystrophy may indicate the presence of homogeneously staining, well-demarcated peripheral areas of hyperfluorescence associated with chorioretinal atrophy. These plaques correspond in our opinion to choroidal neovascularization which is otherwise unsuspected.
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ranking = 452.86102683542
keywords = dystrophy
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6/233. bardet-biedl syndrome.

    This case report describes the presentation of a patient with bardet-biedl syndrome. bardet-biedl syndrome is an autosomal recessive condition that includes retinal dystrophy, dystrophic extremities (commonly polydactyly), obesity, hypogenitalism, and renal disease. Cognitive deficit has also been considered part of the syndrome. The historically associated laurence-moon syndrome includes spastic paraparesis but not the obesity and polydactyly. They are now considered separate conditions. The most common feature of bardet-biedl syndrome is retinal dystrophy. The appearance of the retina in the condition is quite variable with typical retinitis pigmentosa being present in only a minority of cases. The associated optic atrophy can be primary in nature and might play a role in the decreased central vision. diagnosis of the condition is important for visual prognosis and low vision management. The renal disease often goes undetected until specific radiological testing is done after diagnosis of bardet-biedl syndrome. This is significant in that early death often occurs in this condition because of the renal disease.
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ranking = 129.38886481012
keywords = dystrophy
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7/233. retinal detachment and retinoschisis detected by optical coherence tomography in a myopic eye with a macular hole.

    The authors describe a myopic patient with a full-thickness macular hole that was accompanied by both retinal detachment and retinoschisis. A 51-year-old woman presented with a localized retinal elevation of three disc diameters around the macular hole in a myopic eye. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) showed features of both retinal detachment and retinoschisis. After vitreous surgery and postoperative intraocular gas tamponade, the macular elevation resolved, and separation of the neurosensory retina from the retinal pigment epithelium band disappeared on the OCT images. OCT is a useful tool for examining macular conditions associated with a macular hole in myopic patients.
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8/233. Probable common origin of a hereditary fundus dystrophy (Sorsby's familial pseudoinflammatory macular dystrophy) in an English and Australian family.

    A genealogical link was established six generations back between a family living in england and australia, and one of the families reported originally by Sorsby et al (1949) as suffering from autosomal dominant inflammatory macular dystrophy (fundus dystrophy). The onset--in the fifth decade of life--and the progress of the condition, which usually ends in blindness, has been observed in a number of patients and the prodromal development of a colour vision deficiency in some of them confirmed. This defect is fundamentally different from the X-linked colour vision defects and merits further investigation.
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ranking = 646.9443240506
keywords = dystrophy
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9/233. An unusual central retinal dystrophy associated with ichthyosis vulgaris.

    A number of ichthyosis syndromes may have retinal abnormalities such as the retinitis pigmentosa-like diffuse rod-cone dystrophy in Refsum's syndrome and the maculopathy in sjogren-larsson syndrome. We present two sisters who have an unusual, almost identical, bilaterally symmetric central retinal dystrophy associated with ichthyosis vulgaris in the absence of other systemic disorders. We believe that this dystrophy has not been previously described in patients with any of the known varieties of ichthyosis.
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ranking = 452.86102683542
keywords = dystrophy
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10/233. Histopathologic and immunocytochemical analysis of the retina and ocular tissues in Batten disease.

    PURPOSE: To describe the pathophysiologic features of retinal degeneration in Batten disease (juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis [JNCL]) caused by mutations in the CLN3 gene. STUDY DESIGN: Comparative human tissue study. MATERIALS: The retina and other ocular tissues of a 22-year-old man with JNCL were compared with the same tissues of a healthy 30-year-old man. dna from whole blood and rna from retina were used for genotype analysis. methods: The retinas, corneas, conjunctiva, and ciliary body were processed for histopathologic and immunofluorescence analysis. Genomic dna was subjected to polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and nucleotide sequence analyses. Reverse transcriptase/PCR and sequence analysis were performed on retinal rna. RESULTS: The JNCL donor was heterozygous for a approximately 1 kb deletion in CLN3, as found in most JNCL patients. The other allele had a single base pair deletion in exon 6 that resulted in a frame shift. Gross pathology of the JNCL retina resembled that in retinitis pigmentosa, including deposits of bone spicule pigment. Histopathologic studies revealed loss of neurons from all retinal layers. Immunofluorescence labeling with antibodies to rhodopsin, recoverin, and cone opsin demonstrated degenerate rods and cones with short outer segments in the far periphery. Autofluorescent lipopigment granules were prominent in ganglion cells and some cells of the inner nuclear layer, but not in the photoreceptors. The retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) had fewer lipofuscin granules than the control specimen. Increased numbers of lipofuscin granules were found in the epithelia of the ciliary body and conjunctiva, but not in the cornea of the JNCL eye. CONCLUSIONS: Immunofluorescence studies revealed degenerate rods and cones in the far periphery. lipofuscin granules were decreased in the RPE, consistent with loss of photoreceptor outer segments. The novel finding that degenerate photoreceptors did not contain autofluorescent inclusions suggests that granule accumulation may not precede photoreceptor degeneration in JNCL. The presence of normal photoreceptor proteins in the degenerate rods and cones suggests that these cells may be capable of functional regeneration if a therapy for Batten disease is developed.
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