| Literature DB >> 31452938 |
Chris Or1, Jeffrey S Heier2, David Boyer3, David Brown4, Sumit Shah5, Agha Yasin Alibhai1, James G Fujimoto6, Nadia Waheed1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To investigate whether neovascularization may arise and be detectable in drusen, as reported in histopathologic studies, by OCTA prior to developing exudation and to assess its prevalence in a cohort of patients with intermediate AMD.Entities:
Keywords: Age-related macular degeneration; Optical coherence tomography; Optical coherence tomography angiography; Retina; Retinal imaging; Vascularized drusen
Year: 2019 PMID: 31452938 PMCID: PMC6702713 DOI: 10.1186/s40942-019-0187-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Retina Vitreous ISSN: 2056-9920
Fig. 1Vascularized druse on multimodal imaging. A typical yellow drusenoid lesion is noted on the color fundus image (c red arrow). On FA, there is minimal staining (d–f red arrow). Optical coherence tomography demonstrates a dome-shaped drusenoid retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) elevation with homogenous sub-RPE hyperreflectivity. Optical coherence tomography angiography en face image (a) shows a neovascular network, which corresponds with the flow signal (b) located within the drusenoid lesion. Manual segmentation of the RPE and Bruch’s membrane was used to clearly visualize the neovascular network
Fig. 2Vascularized druse on multimodal imaging. A typical yellow drusenoid lesion is noted on the color fundus image (c red arrow). On FA, there is minimal staining (d–f red arrow). Optical coherence tomography demonstrates a dome-shaped drusenoid retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) elevation with a heterogenous multi-laminar sub-RPE hyperreflectivity. Optical coherence tomography angiography en face image (a) shows a neovascular network, which corresponds with the flow signal (b) located within the drusenoid lesion. Manual segmentation of the RPE and Bruch’s membrane was used to clearly visualize the neovascular network
Fig. 3Vascularized druse on follow up. Vascularized druse identified at baseline (a) with development of a low-lying pigment epithelial detachment and subretinal fluid at 6 months follow up (b). Another instance of vascularized druse identified at baseline (c) with persisting vascularity within the lesion at 2 years follow up (d)
Fig. 4Example of artifact when identifying vascularized drusen. An en face optical coherence tomography angiography image of the superficial plexus is shown (top). The corresponding optical coherence tomography image of the cross section is shown with flow overlay (bottom). The red arrow in the bottom image demonstrates an example of projection artifact, originating from the blood vessel in the superficial image (red arrow; top image)