1. Multimodal Chorioretinal Imaging in Erdheim-Chester Disease
- Author
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Corrado Campochiaro, Lea Querques, Maria Vittoria Cicinelli, Riccardo Sacconi, Alessandro Marchese, Francesco Bandello, Giuseppe Querques, Alessandro Rabiolo, Alessandro Tomelleri, Lorenzo Dagna, and Livia Tomasso
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Fluorescein angiography ,eye diseases ,Choroidal nevus ,Ophthalmology ,Histiocytosis ,Choroidal neovascularization ,Erdheim–Chester disease ,medicine ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Subclinical infection ,Rare disease - Abstract
Purpose To analyze the subclinical intraocular involvement using multimodal imaging approach in patients affected by Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) without ocular symptoms. Patients and methods In this prospective cross-sectional study, 18 eyes of 9 consecutive patients with ECD were enrolled. Each patient underwent comprehensive ocular examination and extensive multimodal chorioretinal imaging. Results None of the patients presented any evidence of chorioretinal localization of disease using multimodal imaging. One patient exhibited a choroidal nevus complicated by active polypoidal choroidal neovascularization. Subretinal hyperreflective material was seen in three eyes, mainly resembling acquired vitelliform lesion. One patient had an isolated intraretinal hemorrhage. Most patients exhibited peripheral vascular abnormalities (ie, microaneurysms, peripheral vascular leakage). Fundus autofluorescence showed faint hyperautofluorescence in eleven eyes. Conclusion Intraocular involvement is an extremely rare event of an extremely rare disease. In patients affected by ECD without ocular symptoms, advance multimodal imaging examinations did not show signs of subclinical chorioretinal involvement related to the disease.
- Published
- 2020
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