Missed retinal breaks are the commonest cause of failure of primary PPV for RRD although proliferative vitreoretinopathy may contribute to surgical failure. This re-emphasises the importance of assiduous peroperative retinal examination.
A young male infant was noted at birth to have bilateral cleft lip and palate, bilateral microphthalmos and ocular colobomata, and a dysplastic left kidney. His mother had similar ophthalmological findings and milder facial anomalies which included abnormality of the philtrum and bilateral congenital nasolacrimal duct obstruction. His maternal grandmother had mild facial anomalies including a short philtrum and bilateral congenital nasolacrimal duct obstruction but had no evidence of any ocular abnormalities. The spectrum of abnormalities seen in this family are similar to those described in the branchio-oculo-facial syndrome, a rare dominantly inherited syndrome in which there are a number of developmental abnormalities of the eye, face, and kidney. Although the precise cause of this syndrome is unknown, it is likely to be caused by mutations in a gene responsible for the ordered closure of the foetal fissure and fusion of facial structures.
SummaryA previously healthy 37-year-old woman presented with decreased vision in the right eye, noted suddenly during childbirth. Fundus examination revealed elevation at the right macula, and optical coherence tomography confirmed central serous chorioretinopathy in the right eye. No intervention was undertaken, and the symptoms and clinical findings resolved spontaneously over 2 months.
BACKGROUND
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