4.6 Review

Normal and abnormal foveal development

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
Volume 106, Issue 5, Pages 593-599

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bjophthalmol-2020-316348

Keywords

Embryology and development; Genetics; Imaging; Retina; Macula

Categories

Funding

  1. Ulverscroft Foundation [05/38]
  2. Fight for Sight [5009/5010, 24NN181]
  3. Academy of Medical Sciences [SGL021/1066]
  4. Medical Research Council (MRC), London, UK [MC_PC_17171, MR/J004189/1, MRC/N004566/1]
  5. NIHR [CL-2017-11-003]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Normal foveal development involves displacement of inner retinal layers and changes in outer retinal layers. Foveal hypoplasia is a characteristic feature of various developmental abnormalities and can be diagnosed and correlated with visual acuity based on morphology and grading.
Normal foveal development begins in utero at midgestation with centrifugal displacement of inner retinal layers (IRLs) from the location of the incipient fovea. The outer retinal changes such as increase in cone cell bodies, cone elongation and packing mainly occur after birth and continue until 13 years of age. The maturity of the fovea can be assessed invivo using optical coherence tomography, which in normal development would show a well-developed foveal pit, extrusion of IRLs, thickened outer nuclear layer and long outer segments. Developmental abnormalities of various degrees can result in foveal hypoplasia (FH). This is a characteristic feature for example in albinism, aniridia, prematurity, foveal hypoplasia with optic nerve decussation defects with or without anterior segment dysgenesis without albinism (FHONDA) and optic nerve hypoplasia. In achromatopsia, there is disruption of the outer retinal layers with atypical FH. Similarly, in retinal dystrophies, there is abnormal lamination of the IRLs sometimes with persistent IRLs. Morphology of FH provides clues to diagnoses, and grading correlates to visual acuity. The outer segment thickness is a surrogate marker for cone density and in foveal hypoplasia this correlates strongly with visual acuity. In preverbal children grading FH can help predict future visual acuity.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available