Affiliation:
1. School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Abstract
SIGNIFICANCE
Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is often associated with onset in the young, adult male demographic. This case report serves as a reminder that it can affect both sexes with onset into middle age.
PURPOSE
Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy is a maternally inherited mitochondrial disorder that typically affects men during young adulthood. It presents with a rapid, yet painless loss of vision, with the fellow eye often affected within a few months. The optic neuropathy causes a dense central scotoma with visual acuities reduced to less than 20/400.
CASE REPORT
A 60-year-old White woman presented with reports of decreased vision in both eyes for the previous 2 months. She had been followed up for the previous 5 years for glaucoma suspect monitoring, with full fields and normal optical coherence tomography scans. Entering visual acuity was finger counting at 1 m in the right eye and 20/100 in the left eye. Pupil testing revealed a grade 1 relative afferent pupillary defect in the right eye. Dilated fundus examination revealed stable moderate optic nerve cupping and intact neuroretinal rim tissue. Humphrey 24-2 Swedish Interactive Thresholding Algorithm standard visual field testing showed a significant superior altitudinal defect and inferior paracentral defect in the right eye and a partial superior arcuate in the left eye. The result of the MRI with contrast of the head and orbits was normal. A history of alcoholism was elicited, and LHON testing revealed positive 11778 mutation at homoplasmy.
CONCLUSIONS
Although still uncommon, presentation of LHON in a middle-aged woman is possible and should be considered a viable differential diagnosis when individuals present with painless vision loss and central/centrocecal scotomas.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)