Case Reports in Ophthalmology (Jun 2021)

Case Report: Fibroglial Retinal Tissue in Contractile Morning Glory Disc Anomaly

  • Abel Ramirez-Estudillo,
  • Karla Torres-Navarro,
  • Sergio Rojas-Juárez,
  • Ximena Ramirez-Galicia,
  • Berenice Palafox-Cornejo,
  • Adriana Galicia-Castillo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000510958
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
pp. 525 – 530

Abstract

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The purpose of the present case is to describe a patient with tractional retinal detachment (RD) associated with contractile morning glory: a 17-year-old female, with a history of failed surgery for RD when she was 2 years old in her right eye (OD), nystagmus, and a limited visual acuity in the left eye (OS). The slit lamp examination showed phthisis bulbi in OD and the anterior segment was unremarkable in OS. Dilated fundus examination revealed a tractional RD in the posterior pole and peripapillary and preretinal fibrosis without evidence of intravitreal dispersion of retinal pigment epithelial cells. After surgery treatment, the RD resolved and the posterior segment showed a staphylomatous excavation around the optic disc anomaly with irregular contractions that folded the macular area. This were unrelated to light, breathing, or eye movements. Although morning glory disc anomaly is associated with RD, the early diagnosis can reverse structural changes. In this case, the rare association with contractile movements was found posterior to the pars plana vitrectomy after all the fibroglial epiretinal tissue was removed.

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