“…Slit-lamp biomicroscopy is the first step in the diagnostic approach of OA, revealing a particulate pattern in the cornea, but this technique, possibly complemented with confocal microscopy, should be employed for exposure monitoring, or if GA is suspected even without clinical evidence of OA, since cornea’s Descemet’s membrane displays silver deposits quite early following either systemic or local exposition, making slit-lamp examination a sensitive index for both GA and OA [ 102 , 117 , 118 , 120 , 157 , 162 , 199 ]. Other ophthalmological tests have also been reported, such as fluorescein angiography, optical coherence tomography, and electroretinogram, but their purpose so far has been mainly to find eye structural and functional changes related to argyria rather than establishing the diagnosis and with extrapolations limited due to the number and type of studies [ 149 , 156 , 157 , 158 , 218 , 222 ].…”