American Journal of Ophthalmology Case Reports (Jun 2017)

Optical coherence tomography angiography of iris microhemangiomatosis

  • Amarjot S. Kang, B.S.,
  • R. Joel Welch, M.D.,
  • Kareem Sioufi, M.D.,
  • Emil Anthony T. Say, M.D.,
  • Jerry A. Shields, M.D.,
  • Carol L. Shields, M.D.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajoc.2017.02.003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. C
pp. 24 – 26

Abstract

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Purpose: To report optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) of iris microhemangiomatosis. Observations: A 75-year-old asymptomatic Caucasian man was found to have bilateral pupillary vascular lesions during cataract evaluation. Visual acuity was counting fingers in the right eye (OD) and 20/40 in the left eye (OS) with normal intraocular pressures in both eyes (OU). In each eye there were multifocal, round, dark red, pinpoint vascular tufts at the pupillary margin, randomly distributed and numbering 1 in OD and 7 in OS, each measuring 0.2–0.3 mm in diameter and without active bleeding or hyphema. Fundus examination OU was normal. By fluorescein angiography, the multifocal pupillary vascular tufts demonstrated mild staining without leakage. By OCTA, the tufts were clearly delineated and were fed by normal appearing radial iris vessels. OCT b-scan documented the optically dense vascular tufts at 0.1 mm in thickness and angio-overlay confirmed blood flow emanating from the deep iris stroma. Observation was recommended with the option of cataract surgery to improve vision. Conclusions and importance: Non-invasive imaging of iris microhemangiomatosis with OCTA delineates the vascular lesion with flow arising from the posterior iris stroma.

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