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Query: UMLS:C0042384 (
vasculitis
)
20,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A male rhesus macaque was found to have what appeared to be numerous platelet-fibrin emboli in retinal vessels in the perimacular area.
Indocyanine green
(ICG) dye fluorescence and fluorescein angiograms of the fundus demonstrated leakage of fluorescein, but not ICG, from the involved arterioles. Histopathologic changes in the eyes included occlusion of retinal and choroidal vessels with platelet-fibrin emboli, inner retinal ischemia, ischemic injury to the parafoveal capillary bed distally to occlusion of precapillary arterioles, and retinal exudate limited to the regions of capillary damage. Differential leakage of fluorescein may be explained by the difference in binding affinities of the 2 dyes to blood protein: 20% to 40% of the circulating fluorescein is unbound, and 98% of ICG is bound to serum albumin. Simultaneously or serially performed angiograms with fluorescent probes of different sizes might be used to obtain a qualitative measure of vascular integrity in persons with embolism, diabetic retinopathy, sickle cell retinopathy,
vasculitis
, and other disorders known to produce focal retinal and choroidal vascular occlusion.
...
PMID:Platelet-fibrin embolism in a rhesus macaque: angiographic and pathologic studies comparing fluorescein and indocyanine green. 688 77
A 37-year-old man developed geographic choroiditis and retinal
vasculitis
in the left eye while taking 3.5 mg/day oral prednisolone for rheumatoid arthritis. The choroidal lesions stopped growing when the dose of prednisolone was increased to 60 mg/day, while its tapering resulted in the recurrence and enlargement of the choroidal lesions to the macula. The patient experienced further recurrence twice in the following year.
Indocyanine green
angiography demonstrated the obstruction of choroidal arteries in addition to the complete obstruction of the choriocapillaris in a fresh lesion. This case was the first to have geographic choroiditis on the background of a systemic inflammatory disease.
...
PMID:Geographic choroiditis and retinal vasculitis in rheumatoid arthritis. 953 75
Severe, white sheathing of the retinal vessels and yellowish-white placoid lesions, suggesting frosted-branch
angiitis
, were found in both fundi of a 24-year-old woman. Fluorescein angiography showed hypofluorescence of the placoid lesions in the early phase and hyperfluorescence in the late phase.
Indocyanine green
angiography showed hypofluorescence during all phases. These findings imply an occlusion of the choriocapillaris. Fluorescein angiography also showed occlusion of the peripheral retinal vessels. With systemic corticosteroids and prostaglandin I2 derivative, the fundi recovered almost completely to normal 3 months later.
...
PMID:A case of frosted branch angiitis with yellowish-white placoid lesions: fluorescein and indocyanine green angiography findings. 988 40
We report a case of a 14-year-old otherwise healthy patient who developed acute retinal periphlebitis mimicking frosted branch
angiitis
inferotemporally and associated exudative retinal detachment in the left eye following blunt trauma. Fluorescein angiography revealed delayed filling of inferotemporal branch retinal vein and late leakage of sheathed retinal venules, and late pooling in the area of exudative retinal detachment.
Indocyanine green
angiography showed a crescent-shaped hypofluorescent streak concentric to the optic disk inferiorly highly suggestive of choroidal rupture. The patient was treated with oral prednisone, with gradual tapering over a period of 15 days. One month after presentation, retinal vein sheathing and exudative retinal detachment had resolved, with the development of peripapillary subretinal fibrosis, macular atrophy, pseudomacular hole, and epiretinal membrane. The acute perivenular sheathing in our patient might be related to autoimmune-mediated reaction induced by retinal vascular damage caused by severe ocular trauma. Fluorescein angiography and indocyanine green angiography findings might suggest that the retinal detachment could be caused by leakage from choroid through Bruch's membrane and retinal pigment epithelium rupture or by transient dysfunction of the outer or inner blood-retinal barrier.
...
PMID:Acute retinal periphlebitis mimicking frosted branch angiitis associated with exudative retinal detachment after blunt eye trauma. 2491 35
A 65-year-old Caucasian male presented to the eye emergency department with bilateral significant visual loss. He was otherwise healthy with no significant past medical history. Ophthalmic history was significant for chronic open-angle glaucoma, for which the patient was using latanoprost once daily to both eyes. There was no preceding history of trauma or ocular surgery and the patient was emmetropic. Two weeks prior to his presentation, he reported a headache, which settled spontaneously. Slit-lamp examination demonstrated bilateral keratic precipitates, bilateral significantly shallow anterior chamber, and bilaterally normal intraocular pressures of 16 mm Hg. Fundal examination was significant for bilateral 360-degree choroidal detachments with exudative retinal detachment involving the maculae. These findings were confirmed using wide-field fundus photography, B-scan ultrasonography, and optical coherence tomography. Fundus fluorescein angiography did not reveal any evidence of retinal
vasculitis
.
Indocyanine green
chorioangiography of the posterior pole showed multiple areas of focal choroidal hypoperfusion. Extensive systemic investigation demonstrated no infectious, neoplastic, or inflammatory cause, and the patient did not complain of any systemic symptoms. Treatment with high-dose intravenous methylprednisolone was administered and this brought about complete resolution of both choroidal and retinal detachments, with partial visual recovery.
...
PMID:A Mystery of Bilateral Annular Choroidal and Exudative Retinal Detachment with No Systemic Involvement: Is It Part of Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada Disease Spectrum or a New Entity? 2820 89