“…Pieh and Safran (2003) consider that this "frequent, although rarely reported, morphologic feature" is characteristic of CRAO, a sentiment with which we concur. In many instances, however, the peripapillary axoplasmic ring goes unremarked upon (Song et al, 2013), or it is incorrectly attributed to anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy (AION) following combined CRA and PCA occlusion (Lee et al, 2002). In reality, no prelaminar accumulation of axoplasm occurs in eyes with simultaneous combined CRAO and PCA occlusion because infarction of RGC axon segments continues uninterrupted from the retinal NFL, through the ONH, and into the retrolaminar optic nerve (McLeod, 1976a;McLeod et al, 1980).…”