Retrobulbar optic neuritis and rhegmatogenous retinal detachment in a fourteen-year-old girl with retinitis pigmentosa sine pigmento

Ophthalmologica. 2000;214(2):153-5. doi: 10.1159/000027487.

Abstract

A 14-year-old girl complained of a sudden decrease in right visual acuity. The patient had night blindness, a mottled retina but no pigments, extinguished scotopic electroretinographic response, central scotoma in the right eye and rhegmatogenous retinal detachment. She had initially received laser photocoagulation around the retinal tear and then corticosteroid therapy, cryoretinopexy and segmental buckling. Her right visual acuity increased to 1.0. The association of retinitis pigmentosa sine pigmento, retrobulbar optic neuritis and rhegmatogenous retinal detachment, as demonstrated in our patient, may be uncommon.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Cryosurgery
  • Female
  • Fluorescein Angiography
  • Fundus Oculi
  • Glucocorticoids / therapeutic use
  • Humans
  • Laser Coagulation
  • Night Blindness / complications*
  • Night Blindness / diagnosis
  • Night Blindness / therapy
  • Optic Neuritis / diagnosis
  • Optic Neuritis / etiology*
  • Optic Neuritis / therapy
  • Retinal Detachment / diagnosis
  • Retinal Detachment / etiology*
  • Retinal Detachment / therapy
  • Retinitis Pigmentosa / complications*
  • Retinitis Pigmentosa / diagnosis
  • Retinitis Pigmentosa / therapy
  • Scleral Buckling
  • Visual Acuity
  • Visual Fields

Substances

  • Glucocorticoids