Terson syndrome: a case report suggesting the mechanism of vitreous hemorrhage.
OBJECTIVE: To present a patient with Terson syndrome and to propose a mechanism for vitreous hemorrhage. DESIGN: Observational case report. PARTICIPANT: A 50-year-old woman with subarachnoid hemorrhage and unilateral vitreous hemorrhage. METHODS: Detailed examination with fluorescein angiography and funduscopy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Site of dye leakage on fluorescein angiography in the eye with vitreous hemorrhage. RESULTS: Fluorescein angiography showed the leakage site at the margin of the disc in the eye with vitreous hemorrhage after the vitreous hemorrhage had been removed. CONCLUSIONS: The damage to peripapillary tissues demonstrated by fluorescein leakage suggests that intracranial hypertension affects peripapillary structures through the intervaginal space of the optic nerve sheath.[1]References
- Terson syndrome: a case report suggesting the mechanism of vitreous hemorrhage. Ogawa, T., Kitaoka, T., Dake, Y., Amemiya, T. Ophthalmology (2001) [Pubmed]
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