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Close your left eye and fixate your right eye on the cross in the first diagram. If your eye is about 12 inches (30 cm) away from the monitor, you should notice that the round dot disappears. This distance may vary according to the screen resolution you have set.

 


 


 


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Acute idiopathic blind spot enlargement (AIBSE) syndrome was first reported in 1988 by Fletcher et al.1 as a clinical entity presenting with sudden scintillations and a temporal scotoma centered on the blind spot on an otherwise normal fundus. Later, AIBSE was reported to belong to a spectrum of conditions that include acute zonal occult outer retinopathy (AZOOR), acute macular neuroretinopathy, multiple evanescent white dot syndrome, presumed ocular histoplasmosis, punctate inner choroidopathy, and multifocal choroiditis and panuveitis, collectively called the AZOOR complex.2-6 All of these disorders are most common in young adult women, and each may be associated with visual field loss and abnormalities on electroretinograms. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) studies of eyes with AZOOR complex disorders reveal a loss or irregularity of the photoreceptor inner segment/outer segment (IS/OS) line in areas corresponding to the visual field defects.4-8 In this study, we report the findings for a 63-year-old patient with AIBSE.

 


ÆäÀ̽ººÏ       ¹æ¸í·Ï      ¼öÁ¤ 2018-08-27 / µî·Ï 2013-01-16 / Á¶È¸ : 12409 (535)



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