Vitamin A deficiency and the retinal “double carrot” sign with optical coherence tomography

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Abstract

Background: Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) and full-field electroretinography (ERG) allow retinal assessment with vitamin A deficiency (VAD). Using SD-OCT, this study aimed to characterize and follow a novel retinal abnormality in patients with VAD and intramuscular supplementation. Methods: Patients with VAD were retrospectively reviewed, including SD-OCT and electroretinography. Results: Three patients had VAD following bariatric or colon surgery and varying supplementation. All had nyctalopia, extinguished scotopic rod-specific function with ERG, and decreased serum vitamin A. None demonstrated surface abnormalities. All received intramuscular vitamin A with subjective resolution of symptoms. On SD-OCT, four of six eyes exhibited homogenous foveal hyperreflectivity anterior to retinal pigment epithelium-Bruch complex, reminiscent of a “double carrot”, which improved following supplementation. ERG findings demonstrated improved scotopic rod-specific function in all cases; however, photopic function remained diminished in two cases. Conclusions: Structural improvement of the proposed “double carrot” sign occurs soon after vitamin A supplementation. While scotopic function improves rapidly following supplementation, cone function recovers more slowly. Therefore, foveal changes such as the “double carrot” sign suggest that structural recovery of cones precedes functional recovery.

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Breazzano, M. P., Oh, J. K., Batson, S. A., Kucherich, J. A., Karani, R., Rohrmann, C. M., … Tsang, S. H. (2023). Vitamin A deficiency and the retinal “double carrot” sign with optical coherence tomography. Eye (Basingstoke), 37(7), 1489–1495. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41433-022-02137-9

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