Abstract
Purpose To study and classify retinal lesions in patients with birdshot disease using wide-field autofluorescence imaging and correlate them according to patients' visual status. Methods A multicentre study was carried out on 76 eyes of 39 patients with birdshot disease, analysing colour images and under autofluorescence using the wide-field Optomap® imaging system. This was combined with a complete clinical exam and analysis of the macula with OCT. Results In over 80% of the eyes, a chorioretinal lesion has been observed under autofluorescence with a direct correlation between the extent of the lesion and visual status. The presence of macular hypo-autofluorescence was correlated with a decreased visual acuity, due to the presence of a macular oedema, active clinical inflammation or an epiretinal membrane. The hypo-autofluorescence observed correlated with the duration of the disease and the degree of inflammation in the affected eye, indicating a secondary lesion in the pigment epithelium in relation to the choroid. The pigment epithelium was affected in a diffuse manner, as in almost 50% of the eyes the wider peripheral retina was affected. Conclusion Wide-field autofluorescence imaging could appear to be a useful examination when monitoring patients, to look for areas of macular hypo-autofluorescence responsible for an irreversible loss of vision. © 2013 Acta Ophthalmologica Scandinavica Foundation. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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Piffer, A. L. L., Boissonnot, M., Gobert, F., Zenger, A., Wolf, S., Wolf, U., … Rougier, M. B. (2014). Relevance of wide-field autofluorescence imaging in Birdshot retinochoroidopathy: Descriptive analysis of 76 eyes. Acta Ophthalmologica, 92(6). https://doi.org/10.1111/aos.12292
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