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Clinical Cases in Medical Retina

A Diagnostic Approach

  • 1st Edition - March 2, 2024
  • Latest edition
  • Editors: Jennifer I. Lim, William F. Mieler
  • Language: English

Medical retina is a complex subspecialty with a steep learning curve, requiring vast and diverse knowledge in basic science, diagnostic imaging, medical treatment, and surgic… Read more

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Description

Medical retina is a complex subspecialty with a steep learning curve, requiring vast and diverse knowledge in basic science, diagnostic imaging, medical treatment, and surgical techniques. Clinical Cases in Medical Retina: A Diagnostic Approach provides highly visual, case-based guidance on the challenging process of gathering patient information, ordering appropriate testing, and arriving at an accurate diagnosis and effective treatment plan. In one convenient volume, it exposes retina fellows and specialists, ophthalmology residents, and other eye care clinicians to a wide variety of patient presentations and scenarios, including rare conditions and special populations.

Key features

  • Presents more than 70 clinical cases depicting actual scenarios of patients presenting with a variety of retinal disorders
  • Walks you through history taking, questions to ask, differential diagnosis, testing, management, and follow-up care, all in a concise, templated, and easy-to-read format
  • Covers the latest imaging modalities, including OCT and OCTA, autofluorescence, fluorescein angiography, and ultrasound
  • Includes diagnostic algorithms that help you differentiate between disorders with common presentations
  • Provides expert guidance on treatment options, including prescribing medications, injections, and where appropriate, when to refer for surgery
  • Features quick-reference boxes throughout with clinical pearls, pitfalls, and key points
  • An eBook version is included with purchase. The eBook allows you to access all of the text, figures, and references, with the ability to search, customize your content, make notes and highlights, and have content read aloud

Readership

Retina fellows and specialists; ophthalmology residents

Table of contents

SECTION 1 Hereditary Macular Conditions

1. Yellow Macular Spots in a Child

2. Long-standing Photophobia, Reduced Visual Acuity, Myopia, and Dyschromatopsia in a Young Adult Male Patient

3. Bilateral Progressive Severe Loss of Vision and Obesity

4. Bilateral Peripheral Retinal and Macular Schisis in a Young Boy

5. Congenital Blindness and Retinopathy in a Young Girl

6. Progressive Nyctalopia and Tunnel Vision in a Young Man

7. Rapid Progression of Vision Loss in a Child With Pigmentary Retinopathy

8. Unilateral Tractional Retinal Detachment in a 6-Month-Old Female Infant With Erythematous Skin Lesions

9. Bilateral Peripheral Pigmentary Changes in a Woman

10. I Was Never Good at Ghosts in the Graveyard

11. Bilateral Perifoveal Degeneration in a Woman

12. Autosomal Dominant Radial Drusen

SECTION 2 Degenerative/Deficiency

13. Bilateral Asymptomatic Pigmentary Retinopathy

14. Unilateral Macular Schisis With Blurred Vision in a Woman

15. Acute Vision Loss in an Elderly Patient Associated With Unilateral Intraretinal Blot Hemorrhage in the Macula

16. Bilateral Macular and Peripheral Drusen in a Young Man

17. Long-Standing Macular Scars

18. Bilateral Presentation of Bull’s Eye Maculopathy

19. Late-Onset Nyctalopia and Widespread Geographical Atrophy

20. Bilateral Gradual Visual Decline With Subtle Parafoveal Graying and Refractile Foci

21. Transient Peripheral White Retinal Lesions

22. Bilateral Atypical Drusen and Slow Dark Adaptation in a Woman

23. Bilateral Diffuse Macular and Peripheral Yellow spots

SECTION 3 Inflammatory/Autoimmune Macular Diseases

24. Night Blindness in a Man With a Normal Fundus Examination

25. Hypopyon Uveitis

26. Treatment-Resistant Bilateral Neurosensory Macular Detachment

27. Malignant Photopsias

28. Unilateral Paracentral Scotoma and Photopsia in a Young Woman With Myopia

29. Persistent Bilateral Flashes With Vitreous Cell and Haze

30. Sudden-Onset Bilateral Scotomas With Punched-Out, Pigmented Lesions

31. Bilateral Munir-Focal Serous Retinal Detachments

32. Bilateral Multifocal Placoid Lesions in a Young Woman

33. Bilateral Progressive Vision Loss in an Otherwise Healthy Man

34. Flashes and Floaters With a Well-Demarcated Peripapillary Lesion of the Right Eye

35. Acute Vision Loss in a Pregnant Woman Associated With Bilateral Serous Retinal Detachment

SECTION 4 Infectious Macular Diseases

36. Unilateral Vision Loss in a 45-Year-Old Woman

37. Unilateral Painless Vision Loss With Retinal Detachment

38. Unilateral Vitreous Cell and Chorioretinal Lesions in an Asymptomatic Woman

39. Bilateral Chorioretinal Scars and Pigment Mottling in a Newborn

40. Unilateral Floaters and Vitreous Cells

SECTION 5 Retinovascular

41. Bilateral Retinal Hemorrhages in a Young Man

42. Multiple Branch Retinal Artery Occlusions in a Woman

43. Unilateral Disc Edema in an Elderly Woman

44. Peripheral Transient Fluctuating Retinal Lesion

45. Acute Vision Loss With Peripapillary Cotton Wool Spots

46. Unilateral Leukocoria

47. Sudden-Onset Unilateral Vision Loss in a Young Patient With a “Cherry-Red Spot”

48. Takayasu Arteritis: Bilateral Progressive Loss of Vision With Aneurysmal Dilatation

49. Perifoveal Retinal Whitening and Scotomas in a Sickle Cell Patient

SECTION 6 Idiopathic Macular Conditions

50. A Hypopigmented Lesion in a Baby’s Eye

51. Unilateral Painless Vision Loss After a Viral Illness

52. Bilateral Presentation of Macular Schisis in a Woman

53. Bilateral Vitelliform Detachments in a Woman

54. Hypopigmented Subretinal Lesion in an Elderly Man

55. Jello-like Circles in My Vision

SECTION 7 Toxic/Secondary

56. Bilateral Maculopathy in a Middle-Aged Woman With Interstitial Cystitis

57. Bilateral Chronic Photopsias in a Woman

58. Bilateral Serous Retinal Detachments in a Man With Metastatic Melanoma

59. Bilateral Blurred Vision and Eye Redness With Bacillary and Serous Retinal Detachments

60. Bilateral Decreased Vision in a Middle-Aged Man With Optical Coherence Tomography Findings of Foveal Ellipsoid Disruption

61. Bilateral Central Scotoma With Macular Pigmentary Changes in a Young Man

SECTION 8 Neoplastic/Infiltrative

62. Unilateral Exudative Retinal Detachment in an Elderly Woman

63. Perifoveal Calcified Lesion in Young Girl Patient

64. Bilateral Vitreous Floaters

65. Familial Dense Vitreous Floaters in a Man

66. Asymptomatic Bilateral Retinal White Spots

67. Unilateral Decreased Vision Associated With a Peripheral Mass in a Young Male Patient

68. Peripheral Proliferative Retinal Lesion

69. Bilateral Severe Vision Loss in a Middle-Aged Woman With Constitutional Symptoms

70. Diffuse Choroidal Thickness in a Patient With Migraine Headaches

71. Vascularized, Pigmented Macular Lesion

72. Unilateral Macular Lesion in a Young Man

73. A Young Boy Who Failed Routine School Screening With Unilateral Decreased Vision and an Irregular Reddish Macular Lesion

74. Unilateral Loss of Vision With a Vascular Retinal Lesion

Review quotes

"...an excellent resource for ophthalmic registrars and experienced ophthalmologists alike.... A reference list is also provided for each case, which is a great resource and the cherry on the top for a budding retinal enthusiast such as me! The textbook utilises multiple imaging techniques such as optical coherence tomography angiography, fundus fluorescein angiography and fundus autofluorescence. It is an excellent illustration of how to approach retinal presentations and guides the reader through engaging examples.... There is also a corresponding e-book, which can easily be accessed through a mobile device,... [and] the images in the e-book adapt well, with many colour photos appearing brighter and more detailed.... The format delivers on the authors’ objective of recreating a conference-like retinal case resource, which is incredibly engaging and functions as an adjunct to support clinical reasoning." Dr. Dineo Mpe (research fellow at Auckland University and Eye Institute), New Zealand Optics, February 2025

“The didactic case-based teaching style utilised is highly effective and provides an outstanding resource for developing and refining clinical reasoning.” Dr. Dineo Mpe (research fellow at Auckland University and Eye Institute), New Zealand Optics

"...serves as an easy-to-digest review and update of ocular anatomy and physiology for clinicians, researchers, and students. The book is organized by function... [which] allows for seamless integration of basic science information with clinical knowledge in a way that enhances and refreshes foundational information.... The purpose of this book is to enhance understanding of structure and functional relationships within the eye and ocular adnexa.... [It] provides a unique approach to understanding ocular anatomy and physiology... [and] breaks down broad topics...to smaller segments in a straightforward manner, allowing visualization of the relationship and significance of the structure to the function.... This book is a great resource to refresh or supplement knowledge on a wide range of ocular elements." ©Doody's Book Review Service, 2025, Rachel Grant, OD (Southern College of Optometry)"...serves as an easy-to-digest review and update of ocular anatomy and physiology for clinicians, researchers, and students. The book is organized by function... [which] allows for seamless integration of basic science information with clinical knowledge in a way that enhances and refreshes foundational information.... The purpose of this book is to enhance understanding of structure and functional relationships within the eye and ocular adnexa.... [It] provides a unique approach to understanding ocular anatomy and physiology... [and] breaks down broad topics...to smaller segments in a straightforward manner, allowing visualization of the relationship and significance of the structure to the function.... This book is a great resource to refresh or supplement knowledge on a wide range of ocular elements." ©Doody's Book Review Service, 2025, Rachel Grant, OD (Southern College of Optometry), Doody’s Score: 95 - 4 Stars!

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: June 11, 2024
  • Language: English

About the editors

JL

Jennifer I. Lim

Dr. Lim is Professor of Ophthalmology and Director of the Retina Service at University of Illinois, Eye and Ear Infirmary in Chicago. She is the Marion H. Schenk Esq., Chair in Ophthalmology for Research in the Aging Eye. She currently serves as the Secretary of the Retina Society, Secretary of the Chicago Ophthalmology Society, Associate Deputy Editor of JAMA Ophthalmology, Chairperson of the Nominating Committee for the Macula Society and is on the ASRS Board. She is on the Editorial Board of Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science (IOVS). She is the AAO Councilor for the Retina Society. She has been the Director of the Retina Subspecialty Day, Retina Subcommittee Chairperson of the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO) Annual Meeting Planning Committee, the President of WIO, President of CAOS, Chair of Women in Retina, Chairperson of Retina Society Credentialing Committee, Chairperson of the Macula Society Research and Education Committee.
Affiliations and expertise
Marion H Schenk Chair and Professor of Ophthalmology, Director of Retina Service, Department of Ophthalmology, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA

WM

William F. Mieler

Affiliations and expertise
Cless Family Professor and Vice-Chairman, Director Residency and Vitreoretinal Fellowship Training, Department of Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA

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