| Literature DB >> 23626574 |
Yukiko Hatta1, Hideaki Yokogawa, Akira Kobayashi, Makoto Torisaki, Kazuhisa Sugiyama.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To report the in vivo laser confocal microscopy findings from a patient with Descemet's membrane and subepithelial opacity OU. CASE REPORT: A healthy 41-year-old male with Descemet's membrane and subepithelial opacity OU was studied. Routine ophthalmic examination, standard slit-lamp biomicroscopy, and in vivo laser confocal microscopic analysis of the entire corneal layer were performed. Slit-lamp biomicroscopy revealed subepithelial opacity in the mid-peripheral to peripheral cornea and numerous opacities located at the level of Descemet's membrane. It was difficult to distinguish the precise histological location of the opacity. In vivo laser confocal microscopy showed numerous hyperreflective particles in the subepithelium to superficial stroma and hyperreflectivity of Descemet's membrane. No abnormalities could be detected in the epithelial cell layer, midstromal layer, deep stromal layer, or endothelial cell layer.Entities:
Keywords: Confocal microscopy; Descemet's membrane opacity; Subepithelial opacity
Year: 2013 PMID: 23626574 PMCID: PMC3617894 DOI: 10.1159/000350315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Ophthalmol ISSN: 1663-2699
Fig. 1Subepithelial opacity (arrows) in the mid-peripheral to peripheral cornea and numerous opacities located near Descemet's membrane (arrow heads) from a 41-year-old male; similar findings were observed in both eyes. a Photograph with narrow slit illumination. b Photograph with wide slit illumination.
Fig. 2In vivo laser confocal microscopic image by Heidelberg Retina Tomograph 2 Rostock Cornea Module (Heidelberg Engineering GmbH, Dossenheim, Germany). Similar findings were observed in both eyes. No differences were detected between the central and peripheral regions (scale bar = 50 μm). a The superficial epithelial cell layer was normal. b The basal epithelial cell layer was normal. c In the subepithelium to Bowman's layer, numerous hyperreflective particles were observed. d In the superficial stroma, numerous hyperreflective particles were observed. e The midstroma was normal. f, g The deep stroma was normal. Hyperreflective inclusions as in pre-Descemet's membrane corneal dystrophy were not observed. h Descemet's membrane itself had high reflectivity. i The endothelial cell layer was normal.
Fig. 3a The unused soft contact lens (Aime super-soft, Aime, Yokohama, Japan) had a light blue color. The hydroxyethyl methacrylate-based contact lens was categorized as FDA group I (low water content, nonionic). b One-year used soft contact lens showed a brownish discoloration. Similar discoloration was noted in both of the patient's contact lenses. Metal deposition was not detected with differential interference contrast microscope.
Clinical features and in vivo confocal microscopy findings of the differential diagnosis
| Pre-Descemet's membrane corneal dystrophy | Corneal argyrosis | Our case | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pathogenesis | The inheritance is not determined | Systemic or topical exposure | Unknown |
| The gene is unknown | to silver | ||
| Deposits | Lipofuscin in the keratocytes | Silver | Unknown |
| Eye | Bilateral | Bilateral (or unilateral) | Bilateral |
| Visual disturbance | No | No | No |
| Slit-lamp biomicroscopy findings | Tiny opacities of deep stroma | Gray opacities in the stroma and Descemet's membrane Grayish discoloration of the conjunctiva | Opacities located in the subepithelium and Descemet's membrane |
| In vivo confocal microscopy findings | |||
| Epithelium | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Bowman's layer | Normal | Hyperreflective particles | Hyperreflective particles |
| Superficial stroma | Normal | Hyperreflective particles | Hyperreflective particles |
| Midstroma | Normal | Hyperreflective particles | Normal |
| Deep stroma | Hyperreflective particles in the keratocytes | Hyperreflective particles | Normal |
| Descemet's membrane | Normal | Hyperreflectivity | Hyperreflectivity |
| Endothelium | Normal | Normal | Normal |