| Literature DB >> 23690678 |
Saori Takashina1, Wataru Saito, Kousuke Noda, Maki Katai, Susumu Ishida.
Abstract
This article reports a case of possible involvement of membrane tissue on the optic disc with macular schisis formation associated with glaucomatous optic disc without optic disc pits. A 78-year-old man presented with loss of central visual acuity of the left eye. He had a medical history of primary open-angle glaucoma. Visual acuity was 0.6 in his left eye, and funduscopy revealed macular schisis and a glaucomatous optic disc without optic disc pits. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) revealed membrane tissue on the optic disc and a tunnel-like hyporeflective lesion connecting the schisis cavity and a site near the tissue, but no obvious optic disc pit. He underwent pars plana vitrectomy during which the membrane tissue on the disc and internal limiting membrane were removed. Posterior vitreous detachment was observed intraoperatively. Thereafter, the tunnel-like lesion observed on OCT was rapidly obscured and the macular schisis gradually reduced. Eighteen months after surgery, his visual acuity had improved to 0.9 with almost complete regression of the macular schisis. No optic disc pit was visualized after surgery. The changes in OCT findings described here suggest an etiology for macular schisis without optic disc pits in an eye with a glaucomatous optic disc with posterior vitreous detachment. A connection between the schisis cavity and the vitreous cavity may have appeared via the tunnel-like structure due to the membrane tissue exerting traction on the optic disc.Entities:
Keywords: glaucoma; optic disc pit maculopathy; optical coherence tomography; pars plana vitrectomy; retinal schisis
Year: 2013 PMID: 23690678 PMCID: PMC3656919 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S42085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Figure 1Photographs of the left eye before pars plana vitrectomy (A–D) and during surgery (E). (A) Humphrey threshold 30–2 perimetry was performed at another hospital, and the images from that procedure show decreased sensitivity in the Bjerrum’s areas. (B and C) Fundus photographs demonstrating retinal elevation with folds at the macula and optic nerve head cupping with nerve fiber layer defects (arrows) but no obvious optic disc pit. (D) Optical coherence tomography image showing retinal schisis extending from the optic disc to the macula, without retinal detachment, as well as membrane tissue with a sheet-like shape (white arrow) on the optic disc and a tunnel-like hyporeflective lesion (black arrow) directly connecting the retinal schisis and the 4 o’clock margin of the disc. (E) The membrane tissue on the optic disc grasped by forceps.
Figure 2Photographs of the left eye after vitrectomy. (A) Optical coherence tomography (OCT) image showing that the tunnel-like lesion in the optic disc was obscured 1 month after surgery and (B) retinal schisis was reduced 6 months after surgery. (C) Twelve months after surgery, OCT revealed that the tunnel-like hyporeflective lesion (black arrow) had resolved and retinal schisis had decreased further. (D) Fundus photograph taken 18 months after surgery showing the decrease in retinal elevation at the macula and no optic disc pit. (E) OCT image showing normalization of central retinal thickness with almost complete resolution of retinal schisis.
Abbreviation: M, month/s.