“…Amongst these, there have been reports on perimacular retinal folds and hemorrhagic macular retinoschisis, both of which are considered highly specific for SBS [9,28,37,51,77]. Another relatively common finding is hemorrhaging into the vitreous: one study found that in patients younger than 18 years of age with vitreous hemorrhage, manifest or occult trauma accounted for 73.1% and SBS was the cause in 50% of the bilateral cases [110]. Other findings include macular holes with or without RH [4,94], intrascleral hemorrhages [28], retinal and vitreous detachment [10,120], hemorrhages in orbital fat and extraocular muscles [123], complex findings simulating congenital glaucoma Fig.…”