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Multimodal imaging and functional correlations identify unusual cases of macular retinal pigment epithelium hypopigmentation occurring without functional loss

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PurposePatients with unusual macular retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) hypopigmentation are described and analyzed using retinal multimodal imaging.MethodsWe report three cases of patients with unilateral (2) or bilateral (1) macular lesions… Click to show full abstract

PurposePatients with unusual macular retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) hypopigmentation are described and analyzed using retinal multimodal imaging.MethodsWe report three cases of patients with unilateral (2) or bilateral (1) macular lesions discovered incidentally on fundoscopy. A comprehensive ophthalmic examination including visual acuity, fundoscopy, spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT), short-wavelength light and near-infrared autofluorescence, fluorescein angiography, microperimetry, multifocal electroretinogram, adaptive optics (AO), and OCT-angiography (OCT-A) has been performed.ResultsVisual acuity was 20/20 in both eyes of all patients. The lesion appeared hyperautofluorescent on short-wavelength light and hypoautofluorescent on near-infrared light. Fluorescein angiography revealed a sharply demarcated macular hyperfluorescence without any leakage, suggesting a window defect. Interestingly, SD-OCT revealed only a choroidal hyperreflectivity in relation to the lesions without any abnormality of the outer retinal layers. Microperimetry was normal except for 1 patient with bilateral lesion and subtle decrease in macular sensitivity. Mf ERG was normal in all three patients. AO showed a well-preserved cone mosaic, suggesting that the abnormality was localized under the photoreceptor layers. OCT-A revealed hyperreflectivity just below the RPE layer, corresponding to the macular lesion observed on fundoscopy and the choroidal hyperreflectivity seen on SD-OCT.ConclusionsMacular RPE hypopigmentation should be considered in case of an isolated macular lesion without functional visual impairment or anatomical defect on SD-OCT.

Keywords: macular retinal; hypopigmentation; multimodal imaging; pigment epithelium; retinal pigment; without functional

Journal Title: Documenta Ophthalmologica
Year Published: 2017

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