OCT-morphometric and angiographic parallels between different variants of central serous chorioretinopathy

Vestnik oftalmologii
I E PanovaV A Shaimova

Abstract

Central serous chorioretinopathy (CSCR) is a frequent cause of vision deterioration. Often it is associated with type 1 neovascularization under the pigment retinal epithelium (RPE). Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-angiography) enables non-invasive and contrast-free detection of neovessels in any retinal layer, which makes the method appropriate for diagnostics in CSCR. to investigate OCT-morphometric and angiographic parallels between different CSCR courses. The study included 37 patients with CSCR. All the patients underwent standard ophthalmic examination, measurement of the axial eye length (AL) (Lenstar 900, 'Haag-Streit', Switzerland), spectral OCT and OCT-angiography with SSADA algorithm (RTVue xR Avanti, 'Optovue', USA) as well as fundus imaging and fluorescein angiography (FA) (VISUCAM 500, 'Zeiss', Germany). Judging from the results of spectral OCT and intravenous FA, the patients were divided into 2 groups: group 1 - 20 patients with pigment epithelium detachment (PED) and group 2 - 17 patients without PED. AL averaged 23.75±0.27 mm in group 1 and 23.55±0.40 mm in group 2. Comparative analysis of morphometric parameters in the two groups showed that those patients, whose CSCR manifested with only neuros...Continue Reading

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Citations

Aug 6, 2021·Journal of Ophthalmology·Mary HoFrank Lai

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