Research Article

Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography in Central Serous Chorioretinopathy

Figure 3

Recurrent central serous chorioretinopathy in a 61-year-old man. Multimodal imaging versus OCT angiography (OCTA). Multimodal imaging showing the correlation between color photography (a), fluorescein angiography (FA (b)), indocyanine green angiography (ICGA (c)), optical coherence tomography (OCT (d)), fundus autofluorescence (FAF (e)), and OCT angiography (OCTA (h)) with segmentation at the level shown on coregistered OCT B-scans ((f) and (g)). The color fundus photography showed pigmentary changes; the yellow arrow indicates a hyperpigmentation dot. Uneven leakage of dye ((b) and (c)). OCT B-scan showed a serous retinal detachment (SRD). Hyperautofluorescence with hyperautofluorescent parafoveal dots (arrow). Coregistered OCT B-scan showing the segmentation shown in (h): the yellow vertical lines indicate the limits of the SRD. Coregistered OCT B-scan at the level of the yellow arrow shown in (h): the yellow arrow indicates the small area of retinal pigment epithelium detachment. OCTA showed a moderately dark area delineated by a yellow dashed circle.