Oman Journal of Ophthalmology (Jan 2022)

Persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous in a child with incontinentia pigmenti and infantile spasms

  • Siddharth Madan,
  • Zia Chaudhuri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/ojo.ojo_194_21
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 3
pp. 363 – 365

Abstract

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Incontinentia pigmenti (IP) is a rare neurocutaneous syndrome of X-linked dominant inheritance (1:40000 births in the Caucasian population) which is usually lethal in males. It commonly presents with skin, central nervous system, and dental anomalies. Ophthalmic associations of IP include intra-ocular anomalies such as leukocoria, megalocornea, corneal edema, band keratopathy, bullous keratopathy, iridocorneal attachments, macular capillary dropout, peripheral arteriovenous shunts, retinal neovascularization, vitreous hemorrhage, preretinal fibrosis, traction retinal detachment as well as strabismus. We report an 18-month-old developmentally delayed female child with diagnosed IP and infantile spasms conforming to the west syndrome triad, who presented with left eye microphthalmia and persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous and discuss this rare ophthalmic presentation.

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