| Literature DB >> 16942617 |
Bruno F Fernandes1, Alexandre N Odashiro, Shawn Maloney, Moyses E Zajdenweber, Andressa G Lopes, Miguel N Burnier.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coats' disease is a non-hereditary ocular disease, with no systemic manifestation, first described by Coats in 1908. It occurs more commonly in children and has a clear male predominance. Most patients present clinically with unilateral decreased vision, strabismus or leukocoria. The most important differential diagnosis is unilateral retinoblastoma, which occurs in the same age group and has some overlapping clinical manifestations. CASEEntities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16942617 PMCID: PMC1564043 DOI: 10.1186/1746-1596-1-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Figure 1Clinical photography. Conjunctival hyperemia, mild corneal edema, posterior synechiae and cataract.
Figure 2Computed Tomography. Total exsudative retinal detachment in the right eye.
Figure 3Coats' disease: histopathological findings. Total exsudative retinal detachment (H&E).
Figure 4Coats' disease: histopathological findings. Subretinal fluid with cholesterol clefts and lipid-laden macrophages (H&E. Original magnification × 400).
Figure 5Coats' disease: histopathological findings. Intraretinal cholesterol deposition triggering a giant cell reaction foreign-body type (H&E. Original magnification × 400).
Figure 6Coats' disease: histopathological findings. Telangiectasic retinal vessels (PAS. Original magnification × 200).