| Literature DB >> 25834390 |
Keye L Wong1, Scott E Pautler2, David J Browning3.
Abstract
IMPORTANCE: In some patients, hydroxychloroquine ocular toxicity may progress even following cessation of therapy. Any leverage the clinician may use to allow earlier detection may avert significant vision loss. OBSERVATION: We report three cases suggesting that bull's eye maculopathy seen on near-infrared reflectance with a confocal scanning laser ophthalmoscope could be an early, objective manifestation of hydroxychloroquine ocular toxicity, and with progression of the disease this near-infrared "bull's eye" change may disappear. CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE: Alerting clinicians to this observation may allow a larger case series to corroborate the hypothesis that bull's eye maculopathy detected by near-infrared reflectance may represent an early sign of hydroxychloroquine toxicity.Entities:
Keywords: confocal; multifocal ERG; scanning laser ophthalmoscope
Year: 2015 PMID: 25834390 PMCID: PMC4371897 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S76963
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Figure 1Case 1.
Notes: Bull’s eye maculopathy visible on near-infrared reflectance image (A) but not on autofluorescence (B) or fundus photography (C).
Figure 2Case 2.
Note: Bull’s eye maculopathy visible on near-infrared reflectance image. (A) Central visual field sensitivity loss and (B) multifocal electroretinogram showing weak central waveform signals with (C) bull’s eye maculopathy visible on near-infrared image.
Figure 3Case 3.
Notes: Advanced hydroxychloroquine toxicity with loss of outer retinal layers on spectral domain optical coherence tomography (A); marked loss of visual field (B); weak central waveform on multifocal electroretinogram (C); but without bull’s eye maculopathy on near-infrared image.