| Literature DB >> 29992045 |
Charles M Calvo1, Mary Elizabeth Hartnett1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ultra-widefield angiography is the latest technology in the evolution of fundus fluorescein angiography. With the ability to capture up to 200° of the fundus in a single image, far peripheral retinal pathology can be imaged. Generally, obtaining high-quality fundus fluorescein angiography in a child without sedation in the outpatient setting is exceedingly challenging. Therefore, there are advantages to imaging platforms that can capture the peripheral retina in young children without anesthesia. Often pediatric retinal diseases have pathology localized to the far periphery, which further validates the utility of ultra-widefield angiography. Ultra-widefield angiography has been successfully used without sedation for evaluation of children with various pediatric retinal diseases such as Coats disease, familial exudative vitreoretinopathy, and retinopathy of prematurity.Entities:
Keywords: Coats disease; Familial exudative vitreoretinopathy; Incontentia pigmenti; Pediatric retina; Retinopathy of prematurity; Ultra-wide field imaging; Ultra-widefield fluorescein angiography
Year: 2018 PMID: 29992045 PMCID: PMC5987662 DOI: 10.1186/s40942-018-0122-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Retina Vitreous ISSN: 2056-9920
Summary of UWFA reports
| Author | # of patients | Patient ages | Diagnoses | Notable conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kang et al. | 8 | 9, 10, 10, 11, 11, 14, 14, 14 | FEVR, Coats | A significant degree of pathology was outside of 7 Standard Fields overlay |
| Tsui et al. | 16 | 5, 5, 6, 6, 7, 8, 8, 9, 10, 11, 11, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12 | Coats, pars planitis X-linked retinoschisis, retinal dystrophy, choroidal melanoma, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, toxoplasmosis, panuveitis | Eyelash artifact was present in 12 of 40 images (30%) |
| Rabiolo et al. | 5 | 8, 8, 12, 13, 15 | Coats | 77.8% of unaffected eyes had peripheral abnormalities such as nonperfusion and telangiectasia |
| Patel et al. | 1 | 3 months old | Incontentia pigmenti | ‘Flying baby’ technique was used to position the child. Oral 2% fluorescein solution was safely used |
| Fung et al. | 3 | Infant born at 27 weeks | ROP | ‘Flying baby’ technique used; NICU team present to monitor child in this position |
| Infant born at 24 weeks | ||||
| Infant born at 29 weeks |
Fig. 1Representative photo of ultra-widefield angiography of two children with familial exudative vitreoretinopathy. a Right eye of a 9 year old child with persistent retinal nonperfusion posterior to prior laser photocoagulation. b Left eye of a 10 year old child with prominent temporal vascular dragging, hyperfluorescence and leakage from neovascularization
Revised familial exudative vitreoretinopathy clinical staging system [37]
| Stage | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | Avascular periphery or anomalous intraretinal vascularization |
| 1a | Without exudate or leakage |
| 1b | With exudate or leakage |
| 2 | Avascular retinal periphery with extraretinal vascularization |
| 2a | Without exudate or leakage |
| 2b | With exudate or leakage |
| 3 | Extramacular retinal detachment |
| 3a | Without exudate or leakage |
| 3b | With exudate or leakage |
| 4 | Macula-involving retinal detachment |
| 4a | Without exudate or leakage |
| 4b | With exudate or leakage |
| 5 | Total retinal detachment |
| 5a | Open funnel |
| 5b | Closed funnel |
Fig. 2Representative photo of ultra-widefield angiography in an 8 year old child with Coats disease. Laser photocoagulation was performed previously to telangiectatic vessels and there is staining of chronic exudation in the superior macula
Coats disease staging classification [38]
| Stage | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | Retinal telangiectasia only |
| 2 | Telangiectasia and exudates |
| 2a | Extrafoveal exudation |
| 2b | Foveal exudation |
| 3 | Exudative retinal detachment |
| 3a | Subtotal retinal detachment (1) extrafoveal (2) foveal |
| 3b | Total retinal detachment |
| 4 | Total retinal detachment and glaucoma |
| 5 | Advanced end-stage disease |