Affiliation:
1. Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Abstract
Purpose: This report describes and provides a differential diagnosis for a patient with unusual bilateral retinal pigmented lesions. Methods: A 40-year-old woman was found to have multiple flat, gray lesions scattered across her fundi, becoming larger and more confluent toward the periphery. There were small drusenlike deposits in her foveae. The hyperpigmented lesions demonstrated hypoautofluorescence with thickening of the retinal pigment epithelium and disruption of the overlying layers on optical coherence tomography (OCT). Full-field electroretinography revealed generalized reduced a- and b-wave amplitudes. Results: Chest x-ray, breast ultrasound, mammography, and pelvic ultrasound findings were negative for malignant etiologic factors. Panel testing results for hereditary retinal dystrophy were negative. Conclusions: Although the clinical and OCT appearance of the lesions is similar to congenital grouped pigmentation, the symmetric and bilateral nature of ocular findings coupled with electroretinographic changes suggest a possible retinal dystrophy. This case adds to the phenotypic diversity of pigmented fundus lesions.