Cases reported "Optic Nerve Diseases"

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1/60. Reversible neuropraxic visual loss induced by allergic aspergillus flavus sinomycosis.

    This work reports a patient with visual loss treated successfully with surgical removal of the aspergillus flavus sinomycosis. Vision was partially reversed within hours after surgery before starting planned corticosteroid therapy. The patient's visual acuity continued to improve steadily until it became equal to that of the other eye. The immediate gain in vision and continued improvement without corticosteroid therapy suggest a new hypothesis for visual loss induced by allergic sinonasal aspergillosis. Simple mechanical pressure alone of the aspergillus mass over the nerve can produce visual loss, and this loss is reversed by removing the mass without corticosteroid therapy.
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2/60. Idiopathic intracranial hypertension: a case report with optic nerve histopathology.

    We present the clinical and pathologic findings in an atypical case of idiopathic intracranial hypertension. A 51-year-old man had headaches, visual deterioration, papilloedema, and deafness. neuroimaging was normal, and cerebrospinal fluid pressure monitoring confirmed increased intracranial pressure. The patient was treated with a ventriculo-peritoneal shunt. Histopathology revealed grossly atrophic optic nerves with almost complete axonal loss. The prelaminar portion of the optic nerves was thickened by gliosis and hyalinized capillaries, which have not been described previously.
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3/60. Progressive optic nerve cupping and neural rim decrease in a patient with bilateral autosomal dominant optic nerve colobomas.

    PURPOSE: To document progressive optic nerve cupping and neural rim decrease in a patient with normal intraocular pressures and bilateral autosomal dominant optic nerve colobomas. methods: The ophthalmology records, stereoscopic fundus photographs, and visual fields of a 27-year-old woman with familial (autosomal dominant) optic nerve colobomas were reviewed. The appearance of the optic nerves was documented over a 13-year period (1985 to 1998). RESULTS: Despite repeatedly normal intraocular pressures, the patient showed progressive optic nerve cupping and neural rim decrease in both eyes. Visual field testing was available over a 5-year period (1993 to 1998) and was abnormal, but no progression was seen. CONCLUSIONS: This case of progressive cupping and neural rim decrease in a patient with autosomal dominant optic nerve coloboma in both eyes may provide insight into the optic nerve cupping associated with normal tension glaucoma. Careful follow-up of patients with optic disk colobomas or patients is indicated to detect possible optic nerve changes or field loss.
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4/60. Measurement of venous outflow pressure in the central retinal vein to evaluate intraorbital pressure in Graves' ophthalmopathy: a preliminary report.

    PURPOSE. To evaluate the intraorbital pressure in patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy (GO) in relation to the intraocular pressure (IOP) and proptosis and to find out whether optic nerve compression is predictable. methods. The venous outflow pressure (VOP) in the central retinal vein was measured by the perviously described technique of oculodynamometry.1 Since the central retinal vein passes through the orbit, the VOP cannot be lower than the intraorbital pressure if outflow is to be guaranteed. The IOP was measured either in primary position or with slight chin elevation to avoid restriction of the globe. Fifty-seven patients underwent a complete ophthalmologic examination, including VOP measurements, Hertel exophthalmometry and visual fields. RESULTS. The IOP in primary position ranged between 10 and 29 mmHg and in most (n=54) cases the VOP was 0-4 mmHg higher than the IOP. These patients had neither scotomas nor visual deterioration during an observation period of up to 2 years. In those cases (n=3) where the difference between IOP and VOP was 35 mmHg, the patients developed scotomas and visual deterioration and had to be treated (high-dose steroids or orbital decompression). The elevation in VOP did not correlate with the degree of proptosis. In one unilateral case, treatment of high IOP (32 mmHg) with dorzolamide drops led to a decrease in visual acuity of two lines, inferior field depression and relative afferent pupillary defect. The difference between IOP and VOP was 10 mmHg. Stopping treatment normalized visual function, the IOP rose to its original level and the difference between IOP and VOP was 4 mmHg. CONCLUSION. The increased IOP in GO is not caused by primary glaucoma but by elevated intraorbital pressure. The difference between IOP and VOP must be <5 mmHg to guarantee normal perfusion. We interpret these findings to suggest that loss of visual acuity and visual field defects may not only be caused by optic nerve compression at the apex but also by deterioration of optic nerve head perfusion.
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5/60. Ockham's glaucoma.

    The combination of characteristic optic nerve head cupping, arcuate visual field loss and ocular hypertension would usually be thought sufficient to diagnose glaucoma. Only in the absence of elevated intraocular pressure, when normal tension glaucoma may be suspected, would intracranial imaging normally be performed to exclude occult pathology. A case is presented which illustrates the continuing need for vigilance, and an open mind, years after an apparently straight-forward diagnosis has been made.
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6/60. Laser in situ keratomileusis-induced optic neuropathy.

    OBJECTIVE: To report a case of bilateral optic neuropathy after bilateral laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) surgery. DESIGN: Observational case report. methods: Complete eye examination with detailed evaluation of the optic nerve, detailed medical history, stereo disc photographs, GDx Nerve Fiber Analyzer testing, Humphrey 24-2 SITA visual field testing, diurnal intraocular pressure measurement, serologic evaluation, and magnetic resonance imaging of the brain and orbits. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: optic nerve status, visual field status, and visual acuity. RESULTS: A subject with previously healthy optic nerves had bilateral optic neuropathy develop after LASIK surgery. This neuropathy manifested with a subjective decrease in visual field, normal visual acuity, normal color vision, relative afferent pupillary defect, increased cupping of the optic nerve with focal neuroretinal rim defects, decreased nerve fiber layer thickness, and nerve fiber bundle-type visual field defects. The subject had no other risk factors for optic neuropathy. No other cause of neuropathy was identified. CONCLUSIONS: Optic neuropathy is a potential vision-threatening complication of LASIK surgery. This complication may be due to barotrauma or ischemia related to extreme elevation of intraocular pressure by the suction ring. Careful examination of the optic nerve before and after LASIK surgery is warranted.
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7/60. Optic neuropathy in children with lyme disease.

    Involvement of the optic nerve, either because of inflammation or increased intracranial pressure, is a rare manifestation of lyme disease. Of the 4 children reported here with optic nerve abnormalities, 2 had decreased vision months after disease onset attributable to optic neuritis, and 1 had headache and diplopia early in the infection because of increased intracranial pressure associated with Lyme meningitis. In these 3 children, optic nerve involvement responded well to intravenous ceftriaxone therapy. The fourth child had headache and visual loss attributable to increased intracranial pressure and perhaps also to optic neuritis. Despite treatment with ceftriaxone and steroids, he had persistent increased intracranial pressure leading to permanent bilateral blindness. Clinicians should be aware that neuro-ophthalmologic involvement of lyme disease may have significant consequences. If increased intracranial pressure persists despite antibiotic therapy, measures must be taken quickly to reduce the pressure.
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8/60. Visual outcome of malignant hypertension in young people.

    A retrospective review was carried out of patients under 16 years old with malignant hypertension, who had been referred to a teaching hospital ophthalmology department because of reduced visual acuity. Four patients (three girls, one boy) were seen between 1994 and 2000 with a mean age at presentation of 11.5 years (range 9-15). In the short term, visual acuity improved after control of blood pressure in all four patients. However, in the long term, two patients were registered blind one to two years after presentation, one because of a choroidal neovascular membrane developing at the macula, and the other because of progressive optic neuropathy. Both of these patients had a longer duration of symptoms before diagnosis, worse visual acuity, and higher blood pressure at presentation when compared with the patients who made a good visual recovery. These observations suggest that early diagnosis of malignant hypertension in children is essential in reducing the likelihood of permanent severe visual damage.
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9/60. Juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma presenting as Foster Kennedy syndrome.

    Juvenile nasopharyngral angiofibroma (JNA) is a rare benign tumor of the nasopharynx that occurs in adolescent boys with epistaxis and nasal obstruction. It may grow into the cranium causing elevated intra-cranial pressure and compression on the optic nerve. A histological-proven case of JNA in an 18 year-old Ethiopian boys is presented. He became blind due to optic atrophy in the right eye, but salvaged a useful vision in the left eye radiotherapy. The possibility of Foster-Kennedy syndrome, a presentation of one atrophic and one papilloedematous optic nerve head of bilateral asymmetric optic atrophy, is discussed. Controversies about its histological appearance, natural history, diagnostic methods and management modalities are reviewed. JNA should be considered in adolescent boys who present with optic atrophy and/or nasal mass. Early detection and initial surgical treatment with adjunct radiotherapy could have prevented visual loss on this boy.
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10/60. Steroid-induced glaucoma after laser in situ keratomileusis associated with interface fluid.

    PURPOSE: To report the ocular manifestations and clinical course of eyes developing interface fluid after laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) surgery from a steroid-induced rise in intraocular pressure. DESIGN: Retrospective, noncomparative interventional case series. PARTICIPANTS/INTERVENTION: We examined six eyes of four patients who had diffuse lamellar keratitis develop after uneventful myopic LASIK surgery and were treated with topical corticosteroids. PRINCIPAL OUTCOME MEASURE: Slit-lamp findings, intraocular pressure measurements, and visual field loss. RESULTS: All eyes had a pocket of fluid develop in the lamellar interface between the flap and the stromal bed associated with a corticosteroid-induced rise in intraocular pressure. However, because of the interface fluid, intraocular pressure was normal or low by central corneal Goldmann applanation tonometry in all eyes. The elevated intraocular pressure was diagnosed by peripheral measurement in several cases after months of elevated pressure. All six eyes had visual field defects develop. Three eyes of two patients had severe glaucomatous optic neuropathy and decreased visual acuity develop as a result of undiagnosed steroid-induced elevated intraocular pressure. CONCLUSIONS: A steroid-induced rise in intraocular pressure after LASIK can cause transudation of aqueous fluid across the endothelium that collects in the flap interface. The interface fluid leads to inaccurately low central applanation tonometry measurements that obscure the diagnosis of steroid-induced glaucoma. Serious visual loss may result.
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