国际眼科病理学杂志

Pebble in the Well-Myopia Due to Inflammation of Retina and Choroid-Unique: Case Report

Aliya Sultana*

60-Years-old male patient presented with diminished vision in right eye since many years, left eye since one year. He is security guard by occupation. No history of trauma. Not using spectacles for distance vision. On examination right eye BCVA is no perception of light, deep anterior chamber, mid dilated, fixed pupil, aphakia, and fundus was mild vitritis, dislocated crystalline cataractous lens which was wandering or floating in the vitreous cavity with the position, pale disc, pigmentary changes in posterior pole and peripheral retina. Left eye BCVA is 1/60, anterior segment is normal, pupil was reacting to light immature senile cataract, fundus was media hazy due to cataract, disc was normal with chorio retinal degenerative changes in posterior pole and peripheral retina. Right eye has no prognosis so management not done where as in left eye cataract surgery done, post-operative vision after six weeks was 6/18, patient was advised to come for regular follow-ups to detect early if any macular changes progress to macular exudation and neovascularisation like choroidal neo vascular membrane due to age related macular degeneration or myopia.