Clinical Study

Selective Retina Therapy with Real-Time Feedback-Controlled Dosimetry for Treating Acute Idiopathic Central Serous Chorioretinopathy in Korean Patients

Figure 3

Fundus photographs (a, e) as well as fluorescein angiographic (b) and optical coherence tomographic (OCT) (c, d, f–i) images of a 38-year-old patient with acute central serous chorioretinopathy treated with selective retina therapy (case number 5 in Tables 1 and 2). At diagnosis (a–d), best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) was 20/25, and the patient complained of metamorphopsia. At the location of leakage, a shallow pigment epithelial detachment (PED) (d) (arrow) was observed adjacent to the pachy vessel (d) (asterisk). Three months after treatment (e–i), subretinal fluid had completely resolved and BCVA had improved to 20/20. A PED had resolved after treatment with thinning of the ellipsoid zone at the location of previous leakage (panel g, arrow). There was no notable treatment-related retinal pigment epithelial damage (f-g). The dotted circles in (b) indicate laser spots. Lowercase letters in panels (a) and (e) indicate OCT scanning lines for panels with the same letters.
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