Objective To observe the imaging features of the optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) of complex retinal arterial macroaneurysm (RAM). Methods Nineteen eyes of 19 patients with RAM were enrolled in this retrospective study. There were 1 male (1 eye) and 18 females (18 eyes). The patients aged from 62 to 85 years, with the mean age of 71.3 years. The fundus photography examination revealed the tumors were located in the 1 - 3 branch of the artery, which showed focal spindle-shaped or fusiform angiomatous dilatation. The fundus fluorescein angiography revealed the early uniform fluorescence of the tumor, and the tumor was a high-fluorescence leak in the late period. RAM was divided into exudative type and hemorrhagic type according to the literature and based on the ocular fundus appearance. In 19 eyes, 8 eyes were exudative RAM and 11 eyes were hemorrhagic RAM. All eyes were examined by OCTA, and the retinal blood flow images of 3 mm ×3 mm diameter were routinely collected to observe the OCTA imaging features. Results OCTA examination showed that the superficial RAM of all eyes had strong reflection signal connected with retinal artery. B-scan image showed smaller tumors in the lumen with strong reflection of expansion, or large tumor with peak-like uplift and the blood flow signals in the tumor body were abundant. The enface image clearly showed the three-dimensional shape of the tumor. Tumors with exudation or multi-level bleeding could be clearly documented for their bleeding range and boundary. The white signal co-localized with the superficial retinal blood vessels by the function of multi-color fluoroscopy. The pattern of blood flow density can also clearly show the three-dimensional shape of the tumor. Conclusion The complex RAM is a strong reflection signal in the superficial layer of retina, which is connected with the retinal vessels; B-scan images shows small tumors with a small piece of strong reflection and dilation, or large tumors with mountain-like elevation with abundant blood flow signals. En face image can clearly show the three-dimensional shape of the tumor.
ObjectiveTo observe and analyze the multimodal imaging characteristics of fundus in patients with idiopathic retinal vasculitis, aneurysms and neuroretinitis (IRVAN) syndrome. MethodsA retrospective study. From June 2015 to March 2024, 6 patients (11 eyes) diagnosed with IRVAN syndrome in Shaanxi Eye Hospital were included in the study. All patients underwent examinations including best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), color fundus photography, fluorescein fundus angiography (FFA), optical coherence tomography (OCT) and OCT angiography (OCTA). At the same time, FFA combined with indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) was performed in 6 eyes. Follow-up ranged from 2 to 23 months. Multimodal imaging features were analyzed retrospectively. The number of retinal aneurysms detected by FFA, ICGA, and OCTA was compared by using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. ResultsIn 11 eyes of 6 cases, a total of 1 male (2 eyes) and 5 females (9 eyes) with the mean age of (31.67±12.91) years were included in this cohort. Color fundus photography showed clear optic disc boundaries in 5 eyes, optic disc aneurysms in 8 eyes, retinal aneurysms in 4 eyes; exudation in 9 eyes, localized around aneurysms. On OCT, vitreous high reflective dots and epiretinal membrane on optic disc in all 11 eyes, and macular epiretinal membrane in 3 eyes were revealed. FFA showed optic disc aneurysms and retinal aneurysms in 9 eyes, late optic disc hyperfluorescence in 11 eyes; local arterial leakage in 3 eyes, local venous leakage in 8 eyes, non-perfusion area in all 11 eyes, and retina neovascularization in 3 eyes. Optic disc aneurysms and retinal aneurysms in 5 eyes (total 18 aneurysms) on ICGA were shown compared with optic disc aneurysms in 4 eyes and retinal aneurysms in 5 eyes (total 13 aneurysms) on simultaneous FFA. OCTA revealed neovascularization on the optic disc in 2 eyes, optic disc aneurysmsin 8 eyes, retinal aneurysms in 1 eye (total 2 aneurysms); while on simultaneous FFA, optic disc aneurysms in 8 eyes and retinal aneurysms in 3 eyes (total 5 aneurysms) with no optic disc were displayed. During OCTA follow-up, new aneurysms appeared at the bifurcation of arteries with an increasing angle between them and non-perfusion area enlargement on FFA. Compared with FFA and ICGA, OCTA in detecting the number of aneurysms had no statistics significance (Z=−1.342, −1.342; P>0.05). ConclusionMultimodal imaging can demonstrate characteristics of IRVAN syndrome, ICGA provides superior visualization of optic disc and retinal aneurysms, while OCTA confirms optic disc neovascularization and enlargement of artery angles at arterial bifurcations.