| Literature DB >> 32169056 |
Liuhui Huang1,2, Qi Zhang1, Haiying Jin2, Peiquan Zhao3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pseudoduplication of the optic disc is a rare clinical condition that is characterized by a circumscribed, disc-like lesion with radiating vessels but only one normal optic nerve. We report a rare case that initially resembled a bifurcated optic nerve in a strabismus child. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Chorioretinal coloboma; Double disc; Fluorescein angiography; Pseudoduplication; Strabismus
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32169056 PMCID: PMC7071674 DOI: 10.1186/s12886-020-01369-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
Fig. 1Fundus, FAF, B scan ultrasonography and perimetric examination of the left eye. a. Fundus image demonstrating duplication of the optic disc. b. FAF image demonstrating that the area located between the true disc and the disc-like lesion showed hyperfluorescence, indicating the accumulation of lipofuscin between the nerve fibre layer and choroidal membrane layer. c. B scan ultrasonography presented an ectatic coloboma below the optic disc that communicated with the true optic nerve and therefore resembled a bifurcated optic nerve. d. Perimetric examination revealed a relative horizontal superior defect
Fig. 2OCT images of the left eye. a. OCT examination of the true optic disc was normal. b. OCT examination of the disc-like lesions showed a huge and deep crater-like depression in the lesion, a disturbed nerve fibre layer and the absence of regular outer retinal layers
Fig. 3MRI images of the right eye and left eye. a and b. Sagittal MRI scans of the left eye. c. Axial MRI scans of both eyes. d. Coronal MRI scans of both eyes. MRI images revealed that the morphology of the globe in the left eye was abnormal and that the abnormally shaped optic nerve in the left eye was partially shifted toward the nasal side. The right eye showed a single optic nerve
Fig. 4FFA images of the right eye and left eye. a. The temporal field of the right eye showed a vascular loop. b. The posterior pole of the right eye was normal. c. The superior field of the left eye showed a descending venule that drained into the optic disc and divide into 2 branches when it reached the disc-like lesion. Approximately 5 small arterioles and 3 venules departed from the central cupping area. d. Hyperfluorescence with patchy fluorescence was evident in the inferotemporal field of the left eye. e. The temporal field of the left eye showed a vascular loop. f. The inferior disc-like lesions of the left eye showed marked hypofluorescence, and the area located between the optic disc and the lesion showed late hyperfluorescence