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ARE THERE TWO FORMS OF MULTIPLE EVANESCENT WHITE DOT SYNDROME?

Essilfie, Juliet; Bacci, Tommaso; Abdelhakim, Aliaa H; Ramtohul, Prithvi; Turchi, Federica; Freund, K Bailey; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A
PURPOSE:To analyze the nature of multiple evanescent white dot syndrome (MEWDS) and differentiate an idiopathic or primary form of MEWDS from a secondary form that is seen in association with other clinical conditions affecting the posterior segment of the eye. METHODS:Clinical and multimodal imaging findings including color fundus photography, fundus autofluorescence, fluorescein angiography, indocyanine green angiography, spectral-domain optical coherence tomography, and optical coherence tomography angiography of patients with secondary MEWDS are presented. RESULTS:Twenty consecutive patients with secondary MEWDS were evaluated. Fifteen patients were female. Most were young adults aged between 20 to 40 years with myopia (less than -6 diopters). Pathologic conditions associated with the secondary MEWDS reaction were high myopia (greater than -6 diopters) in two eyes, previous vitreoretinal surgery for rhegmatogenous retinal detachment in 2 eyes, and manifestations of multifocal choroiditis in 18 eyes. In all eyes, the MEWDS lesions followed a course of progression and resolution independent from the underlying condition. CONCLUSION:Secondary MEWDS seems to be an epiphenomenon ("EpiMEWDS") that may be seen in association with clinical manifestations disruptive to the choriocapillaris-Bruch membrane-retinal pigment epithelium complex.
PMID: 34432725
ISSN: 1539-2864
CID: 5175512

Acute Idiopathic Maculopathy

Chapter by: Breazzano, Mark P.; Fernández-Avellaneda, Pedro; Freund, K. Bailey; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A.
in: Albert and Jakobiec's Principles and Practice of Ophthalmology: Fourth Edition by
[S.l.] : Springer International Publishing, 2022
pp. 3807-3813
ISBN: 9783030426330
CID: 5500932

Multiple Evanescent White Dot Syndrome

Chapter by: Breazzano, Mark P.; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A.; Sorenson, John A.
in: Albert and Jakobiec's Principles and Practice of Ophthalmology: Fourth Edition by
[S.l.] : Springer International Publishing, 2022
pp. 4193-4208
ISBN: 9783030426330
CID: 5500952

Idiopathic Polypoidal Choroidal Vasculopathy

Chapter by: Breazzano, Mark P.; Fernández-Avellaneda, Pedro; Ledesma-Gil, Gerardo; Wang, Fenghua; Tso, Mark O.M.; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A.
in: Albert and Jakobiec's Principles and Practice of Ophthalmology: Fourth Edition by
[S.l.] : Springer International Publishing, 2022
pp. 3645-3661
ISBN: 9783030426330
CID: 5501082

EVALUATION OF SEGMENTAL RETINAL ARTERITIS WITH OPTICAL COHERENCE TOMOGRAPHY ANGIOGRAPHY

Tsui, Edmund; Leong, Belinda C S; Mehta, Nitish; Gupta, Akash; Goduni, Lediana; Cunningham, Emmett T; Freund, K Bailey; Lee, Gregory D; Dedania, Vaidehi S; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A; Modi, Yasha S
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:To describe the vascular anatomy and intraluminal flow characteristics of segmental retinal arteritis (SRA) using structural and angiographic optical coherence tomography (OCT). METHODS:Retrospective case series of consecutive patients presenting with SRA. All patients were evaluated at presentation with fundus photography, spectral domain OCT, and OCT angiography. One patient was imaged with dense B-scan OCT angiography. RESULTS:Three eyes of three male patients were evaluated. All examinations were consistent with reactivation of ocular toxoplasmosis with an area of active retinochoroiditis adjacent to a focal chorioretinal scar. Spectral domain OCT through areas of SRA noted on clinical examination demonstrated areas of hyperreflectivity circumscribing the affected vessel with a normoreflective lumen. Optical coherence tomography angiography and dense B-scan OCT angiography demonstrated narrowing of the intraluminal flow signal that correlated with areas of segmental hyperreflectivity on spectral domain OCT. Vascular sections proximal and distal to areas of SRA showed normal flow signal. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Vessels with SRA demonstrated hyperreflectivity highlighting the vessel wall on spectral domain OCT. Optical coherence tomography angiography showed narrowing of the flow signal within these segments suggesting reduced lumen diameter. Coupling these finding with previous indocyanine green imaging findings in SRA, the collective data suggest the plaques are localized within the vessel wall to either the endothelium or the muscular tunica media without occlusion of the vessel lumen.
PMID: 31313702
ISSN: 1937-1578
CID: 3977882

Presumed Natural History of Combined Hamartoma of the Retina and Retinal Pigment Epithelium (CHRRPE)

Ledesma-Gil, Gerardo; Essilfie, Juliet; Gupta, Rajan; Fung, Adrian T; Lupidi, Marco; Pappuru, Rajeev R; Nayak, Sameera; Sahoo, Niroj Kumar; Kaliki, Swathi; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A; Reid, Kate; Lim, Lianne; Sacconi, Riccardo; Dave, Vivek; Singh, Sumit R; Ayachit, Apoorva; Gabrielle, Pierre-Henry; Cai, Sophie; Lima, Luiz; Querques, Giuseppe; Arevalo, Fernando; Freund, K Bailey; Shields, Carol L; Chhablani, Jay
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:To correlate structural changes of combined hamartoma of the retina and retinal pigment epithelium (CHRRPE) with patient age. DESIGN/METHODS:Retrospective study. SUBJECTS/METHODS:There were 50 eyes of 49 patients (age range 1-74 years) with CHRRPE studied at nine tertiary vitreoretinal institutions. METHODS:We analyzed the clinical findings with respect to lesion topography and pigmentation as well as investigated the optical coherence tomography (OCT) findings regarding the thickness, vitreoretinal interface, outer plexiform layer distortion, ellipsoid zone disruption and retinal pigment epithelium/Bruch's membrane complex involvement of CHRRPE. MAIN OUTCOMES/RESULTS:Clinical and imaging findings of CHRRPE at different ages. RESULTS:Analysis of 50 CHRRPE revealed younger patients were more likely to have partial thickness involvement of the retina (p = 0.009) with predominantly inner retinal layer involvement (p = 0.04). The inverse was true for older patients with CHRRPE. In addition, older patients more commonly showed pigmentary changes. Eyes with CHRRPE were more likely to have an increase in central macular thickness independently of tumor location. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Based on these findings, we believe that CHRRPE typically begins in the inner retina and continues towards the outer retina over time, with increase in central macular thickness, despite the location of the tumor.
PMID: 33516918
ISSN: 2468-6530
CID: 4775712

Salivary alpha amylase levels may correlate with central serous chorioretinopathy activity

Abdelhakim, Aliaa H; Ledesma-Gil, Gerardo; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A
PMID: 34292223
ISSN: 1539-2864
CID: 4948462

Bacillary detachment in an idiopathic chorioretinitic disorder

Hilgert, Carolina R; Japiassú, Ricardo M; Hilgert, Álvaro H; Lima, Luiz H; Balaratnasingam, Chandrakumar; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A; Vianna, Raul N G
PMID: 34171906
ISSN: 1937-1578
CID: 4925882

Macular edema in a peculiar case of pigmentary maculopathy

Pimentel, Sergio L G; Conci, Lívia S; Lima, Luiz H; Balaratnasingam, Chandrakumar; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A; Shields, Carol L
PMID: 34171897
ISSN: 1937-1578
CID: 4925872

Hyperreflective Foci, Optical Coherence Tomography Progression Indicators in Age-Related Macular Degeneration, Include Transdifferentiated Retinal Pigment Epithelium

Cao, Dongfeng; Leong, Belinda; Messinger, Jeffrey D; Kar, Deepayan; Ach, Thomas; Yannuzzi, Lawrence A; Freund, K Bailey; Curcio, Christine A
Purpose:By optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging, hyperreflective foci (HRF) indicate progression risk for advanced age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and are in part attributable to ectopic retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). We hypothesized that ectopic RPE are molecularly distinct from in-layer cells and that their cross-retinal course follows Müller glia. Methods:In clinical OCT (61 eyes, 44 patients with AMD, 79.4 ± 7.7 years; 29 female; follow-up = 4.7 ± 0.9 years), one HRF type, RPE plume (n = 129 in 4 morphologies), was reviewed. Twenty eyes of 20 donors characterized by ex vivo OCT were analyzed by histology (normal, 4; early/intermediate AMD, 7; geographic atrophy, 6; neovascular AMD, 3). Cryosections were stained with antibodies to retinoid (RPE65, CRALPB) and immune (CD68, CD163) markers. In published RPE cellular phenotypes, red immunoreactivity was assessed semiquantitatively by one observer (none, some cells, all cells). Results:Plume morphology evolved over time and many resolved (40%). Trajectories of RPE plume and cellular debris paralleled Müller glia, including near atrophy borders. RPE corresponding to HRF lost immunoreactivity for retinoid markers and gained immunoreactivity for immune markers. Aberrant immunoreactivity appeared in individual in-layer RPE cells and extended to all abnormal phenotypes. Müller glia remained CRALBP positive. Plume cells approached and contacted retinal capillaries. Conclusions:HRF are indicators not predictors of overall disease activity. Gain and loss of function starts with individual in-layer RPE cells and extends to all abnormal phenotypes. Evidence for RPE transdifferentiation, possibly due to ischemia, supports a proposed process of epithelial-mesenchyme transition. Data can propel new biomarkers and therapeutic strategies for AMD.
PMCID:8399556
PMID: 34448806
ISSN: 1552-5783
CID: 5011192