4.3 Article

Impairment of visual acuity and retinal morphology following resolved chronic central serous chorioretinopathy

Journal

BMC OPHTHALMOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12886-019-1171-5

Keywords

Chronic central serous chorioretinopathy; Micropulse laser; Central retinal thickness; Subretinal fluid

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PurposeCentral serous chorioretinopathy (CSCR) is a complex ocular entity that, in its chronic form, can lead to serious visual impairment and morphological damage to the retina.The aim of the current retrospective study was to evaluate the damage present after long-standing but resolved central serous chorioretinopathy and refer it to healthy individuals. Correlations between measurable factors-for example, duration of the disease, baseline retinal morphological parameters, or patient age and/or their degree of impairment-were also assessed.Materials and methodsThe study group consisted of thirty-two eyes (13 female and 19 male, mean age 49.6years SD +/-10.5) with chronic central serous chorioretinopathy (mean duration 18.9months SD +/-15.4) in which complete resolution of subretinal fluid was achieved after subthreshold micropulse laser treatment. Inclusion criterion was a lack of subretinal fluid within the whole area of the central retina scanned by the spectral domain optical coherence tomography. The group was extracted out of 51 cases of chronic CSCR that were treated with that method. They were analyzed according to final best-corrected visual acuity and retinal morphological parameters as measured by spectral optical coherence tomography with angiography option (OCTA). Results were compared with the outcomes of a control group, which consisted of 40 eyes of healthy individuals with full distance visual acuity (0.0 logMAR, 1.0 Snellen) never treated with subthreshold micropulse laser. Statistical analysis included regarding correlation between final visual acuity and final central retinal thickness and retinal and functional parameters prior to treatment.ResultsFinal best-corrected visual acuity after chronic central serous chorioretinopathy was 0.23 logMAR (0.6 Snellen) and central retinal thickness was 39.32 mu m smaller than in controls. No correlation was found between final visual acuity and retinal thickness and duration of the disease, patient age, and baseline morphological retinal parameters. OCTA scans revealed impaired choriocapillaries flow signal even following resolution of the disease.ConclusionChronic central serous chorioretinopathy is a potentially damaging clinical entity that results in serious visual impairment, retinal thinning, and choroidal flow defects. Further research is needed to determine precisely the timepoint of this damage.

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