During macular oedema with severe hard exsudates due to DME or RVO, systematic detection of capillary macroaneurysms by ICGA followed by their OCT-controlled photocoagulation may be of interest. These results may contribute to re-evaluate the role of photocoagulation in the management of longstanding macular oedema.
To assess topographic variations of choroidal thickness (CT) in the fovea and beyond in healthy eyes. METHODS. This cross-sectional study included healthy subjects ≤ 55 years of age with axial lengths (22-26 mm) and refractive error margins (-4D, +4D) in normal ranges. Images were acquired using swept-source optical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-A). Corneal thickness (CT) maps from 12 × 12-mm radial scans and 9 × 9-mm OCT-A B-scans were analyzed. RESULTS. The study included 64 eyes of 33 subjects (mean age, 37 years). Mean CT was >300 μm in all locations except the nasal outer macula. The subfoveal CT was >395 μm in 30% of cases; in 38.7% of cases, >50% of the CT map was thicker than 395 μm. The mean thickest choroidal point was 395.2 μm (range, 164-548 μm), located superior and temporal to the macula in 72.2% of cases and subfoveally in 1.8% of cases. The CT pattern was symmetrical (58%) or asymmetrical (42%) along a horizontal axis correlating with choroidal vein distribution. Half of the asymmetrical patterns were thicker in the inferior quadrants, with an oblique temporal watershed of venous drainage, and the other half were thicker superiorly. The mean vascularity index was ∼75% regardless of the mean CT. CONCLUSIONS. One-third of healthy eyes of patients younger than age 55 had a thick choroid (>395 μm). In these normal eyes, the thickest choroidal point was not subfoveal, CT symmetry above and below the fovea depended on choroidal vein distribution, and choroidal vascularity index was independent from CT. No patients demonstrated fundus autofluorescence abnormalities, and the choriocapillaris remained visible even in thick choroids. These features could be interesting when differentiating normal versus pathological states.
AimsTo analyse the prevalence and postoperative outcomes of a particular form of epiretinal membrane (ERM) with foveoschisis-like stretched hyporeflective spaces in emmetropic eyes.MethodsA retrospective study of all consecutive eyes operated for primary ERM over a 46-month period was conducted. The presence of foveoschisis-like stretched hyporeflective spaces was assessed on the preoperative optical coherence tomography B-scan in all eyes. Highly myopic eyes were excluded. Preoperative and postoperative characteristics of eyes with foveoschisis were compared with those of a control group of 100 consecutive eyes with primary ERM without cystoid spaces.ResultsOf 544 eyes with primary ERM, 17 had foveoschisis, corresponding to a prevalence of 3.1%. After a mean postoperative follow-up of 17.9±10.9 months, the foveoschisis had completely resolved in 76.5% of eyes (n=13/17). In the four eyes (23.5%) with persistent foveoschisis, the remaining hyporeflective cystoid spaces were located exclusively in the inner nuclear layer. The postoperative visual acuity and central macular thickness did not differ between both groups at the final visit. However, an acute postoperative macular oedema occurred in 24% (n=4/17) of cases (vs 3% in the control group; p=0.0084).ConclusionFoveoschisis was found in about 3% of eyes with idiopathic ERM. After peeling, the foveoschisis usually resolves completely with functional outcomes similar to those achieved with other primary ERM. However, this feature was associated with a higher risk of postoperative macular oedema (in 1/4 of cases).
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