13 nəticələr
Optic disc drusen (ODD) is an important clinical entity that is sometimes misdiagnosed as papilledema because of elevated and blurred disc margins. A 17-year-old male who presented with headaches underwent detailed ophthalmological examination as well as colored fundus photography, B-scan
A 14-year-old girl had a 3-month history of headache and blurred vision. Funduscopy showed bilateral optic disc edema. Findings on brain imaging were normal, and a diagnosis of idiopathic intracranial hypertension was confirmed after lumbar puncture showed an elevated opening pressure of 32 cm
Optic disc drusen make examination towards glaucoma difficult to interpret. They change nerve head morphology and visual field defects can resembling glaucomatous damage. Patient with strong headache was examined and we found drusen on both optic nerve heads and intraocular pressure about 27 mmHg.
In ophthalmoscopy, optic disc drusen often bear a fallacious resemblance to true papilloedema and some of those affected have neurological disorders. Adequate realization among neuropaediatricians of the relation between drusen and these disorders may save some children from neuroradiological and
A case is presented in which unilateral visible optic nerve head drusen and a contralateral visual acuity loss are associated with moderate hypermetropia and the use of oral contraceptives. Optic nerve drusen are known to be responsible for visual field losses, but a reduction in visual acuity is a
A 42-year-old woman presented with a history of headache. Results of funduscopic examination revealed elevated disc margins and bilateral optic nerve head drusen. Lumbar puncture, head computed tomography, and fluorescein fundus angiography results were consistent with the diagnosis of pseudotumor
Optic nerve drusen (OND) are abnormal calcified acellular deposits located within the prelaminar portion of the optic nerve. They are usually asymptomatic and detected incidentally during fundoscopic examination. They have a clinical significance due to their appearance which mimicks true
Four cases of optic disk drusen were accurately diagnosed with orbital computed tomography (CT). The radiologist should be aware of the characteristic CT finding of discrete calcification within an otherwise normal optic disk. This benign process is easily differentiated from lesions such as
As part of a clinical examination of 200 patients with pseudopapilloedema with and without verified optic disc drusen, neuroophthalmological examinations were performed in 158, neurological examinations in 117 and electroencephalography in 109 patients. Headache and suspected papilloedema were the
Idiopathic intracranial hypertension is a headache syndrome characterized by elevated intracranial pressure with normal cerebrospinal fluid content, normal cranial imaging, and elevated appearance of the optic disc. We report on a 6.5-year-old boy with complaints of headache and right esotropia
METHODS
Two patients presented with headache and bilateral papillary edema. Patient 1 was found to have a papilledema (P) with intracranial pressure of 32cmH2O. Patient 2 was found to have a migraine with a pseudopapilledema (PP) (optic nerve head drusen). SD-OCT was used to image the optic disc,
We present three patients with optic nerve drusen. On the basis of headaches, transient obscurations of vision, or visual field loss the patients underwent orbital computed tomographic (CT) scanning. This procedure confirmed the presence of buried drusen in the four optic discs that had yielded poor
A 37-year-old woman complained of headaches following bilateral visual loss in the past two years. She was obese and had undergone bariatric surgery three months earlier, followed by a considerable weight loss. Neuro-ophthalmic examination revealed a bilateral swollen optic disk. After a