Neurosensory retinal detachment secondary to torpedo maculopathy.

ODwire.org NewsBot

NewsBot
Staff member
Jul 30, 2007
8,369
68
0
School/Org
Newsbot U
City
Barre
State
VT
Neurosensory retinal detachment secondary to torpedo maculopathy. Optometry. 2010 Aug;81(8):405-407 Authors: Su Y, Gurwood AS BACKGROUND: Torpedo maculopathy has been characterized as a congenital retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) nevus. CASE: A 38-year-old black woman presented with a chief complaint of intermittent floating spots in the right eye of 7 months' duration. Dilated fundoscopy found a "torpedo-shaped" lesion, with the tip of the lesion pointing toward the temporal macula. Visual field testing found a paracentral nasal defect, and optical coherence tomography (OCT) found a sensory retinal detachment. CONCLUSION: This lesion was unique because of the visibly detectable alterations seen in the photoreceptor layer of the retina and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) in the setting of what was confirmed as a neurosensory retinal detachment. Torpedo maculopathy, although benign, may be visually devastating if its neurosensory etiopatholgy involves the macula. Even so, it rarely requires intervention. PMID: 20655498 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

More...