American Journal of Ophthalmology Case Reports (Sep 2020)

Rapid visual field constriction in a patient with retinitis pigmentosa and pituitary adenoma

  • Hayder Al-Hasani,
  • Naheed W. Khan,
  • Kari H. Branham,
  • John R. Heckenlively,
  • Stephen E. Sullivan,
  • Lindsey B. De Lott,
  • Abigail T. Fahim

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19
p. 100762

Abstract

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Purpose: To report a case of pituitary adenoma in a patient with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and consequent rapid constriction of the visual field in each eye, which is atypical for either of these pathologies. Observations: A 45-year old male, with a long-standing history of RP, presented with rapid vision loss over 3 months. Examination revealed a severe drop in visual acuity and significant progression of concentric visual field constriction in each eye compared to 3 months prior. MRI revealed a pituitary macroadenoma compressing the optic chiasm. The patient underwent endoscopic trans-sphenoidal resection of the tumor and experienced partial recovery of visual acuity but not visual field. Conclusions and importance: The visual field deficit in this patient was atypical for pituitary adenoma or optic neuropathy. The pattern was most consistent with RP, but the rate of progression was not. In a patient with chiasmal pathology in the setting of pre-existing retinopathy, visual field progression may not be limited exclusively to the bitemporal regions. Rapid constriction of the visual field in a patient with RP should prompt a work-up for alternative etiologies which includes neuro-imaging.

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