| Literature DB >> 28611648 |
Yurie Fukiyama1, Hidehiro Oku1, Yusuke Hashimoto1, Yuko Nishikawa1, Masahiro Tonari1, Jun Sugasawa1, Shigeru Miyachi2, Tsunehiko Ikeda1.
Abstract
It is not common for an isolated visual symptom to be the first indication of an aneurysm compressing the optic nerve. The compression can lead to blindness, and a recovery from the blindness is rare. We report a female with a left painless optic neuropathy caused by an unruptured anterior cerebral artery aneurysm. The patient had a temporal hemianopic visual field defect, which progressed to blindness in the left eye, while the right visual function was not affected. A coil embolization of the aneurysm completely restored her visual acuity to 20/20. These findings suggest that aneurysmal lesions should be ruled out in case of unilateral optic neuropathy with hemianopic visual field defects and progressive visual loss.Entities:
Keywords: Anterior cerebral artery aneurysm; Compressive optic neuropathy; Hemianopic visual field defects
Year: 2017 PMID: 28611648 PMCID: PMC5465734 DOI: 10.1159/000458753
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Ophthalmol ISSN: 1663-2699
Fig. 1Visual field changes of a patient with severe reduction of vision in the left eye. a Findings at the initial examination. A temporal hemianopia respecting the vertical midline is present in the left eye, while the visual field of the right eye is not affected. b Three days after the endovascular surgery. The left visual field is larger than that at the initial examination with blindness (left). One month after the surgery, the left visual field recovers to the normal size (right).
Fig. 2Axial T1-weighted (a) and axial T2-weighted (b) magnetic resonance images, axial T1-weighted magnetic resonance images with gadolinium enhancement (c), and coronal T1-weighted magnetic resonance images with gadolinium enhancement (d). Inside the aneurysm (indicated by an arrow in each image), a heterogeneous pattern of intensities exists with partial gadolinium enhancement.
Fig. 3Magnetic resonance angiography (a) and digital subtraction angiography (b). The aneurysm is indicated by an arrow in each image.