
PHOTO ESSAY: Idiopathic Atypical Hyphema
Hyphema is the accumulation of red blood cells in the anterior chamber of the eye. Blood accumulates from the disruption of vessels of the iris or…
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by Ana Bonaldi, OD, FAAO | Nov 30, 2023 | Anterior Segment, Volume 1, Issue 3
Hyphema is the accumulation of red blood cells in the anterior chamber of the eye. Blood accumulates from the disruption of vessels of the iris or…
Read Moreby Thanh T. Le OD, MPH, FAAO and Dipti Singh, OD, MPH, FAAO, ABCMO | Nov 29, 2023 | Featured Article, Neuro, Volume 1, Issue 3
Cerebellar pontine angle meningioma is rare in ophthalmic practices because it has a variety of nonspecific symptoms that can be misleading…
Read Moreby Steve Njeru, OD, MS, FAAO, Eric Spotts, OD and Melissa Chen, OD | Nov 28, 2023 | Retina, Systemic Disease, Volume 1, Issue 3
Sickle cell disease is one of the world’s most common hemoglobinopathies, with a wide spectrum of systemic manifestations. The most common ocular…
Read Moreby Doug Rett OD, FAAO, ABCMO | Nov 28, 2023 | Editor's Column, Volume 1, Issue 3
I get inspired when I come back from a CE conference; I hope you, reader, get that same inspiration from the articles in this issue. Open up the latest…
Read Moreby Kyle D Klute, OD, FAAO | Nov 28, 2023 | Follow the Science, Volume 1, Issue 3
Deciding what something is not is just as important as knowing what something is Pertinent negatives in clinical practice help make deductive clinical…
Read Moreby Victoria Shust, OD, Rajni K. Acharya, OD, MBS, FAAO and Kristina Treml, O.D. | Nov 28, 2023 | Systemic Disease, Volume 1, Issue 3
Bilateral optic disc edema can be an ocular complication of serious conditions, emerging literature suggests a potential relationship between SLE and IIH…
Read Moreby Joseph Kane OD, FAAO | Nov 28, 2023 | Neuro, Neuro Nuggets, Volume 1, Issue 3
This month’s column highlights a patient that was diagnosed with a non-functioning pituitary macroadenoma and underwent trans-sphenoidal resection
Read Moreby John Conto, OD, Dipl. AAO and Jane Bachman Groth, OD, FAAO | Nov 27, 2023 | Cornea, Volume 1, Issue 3
This unique case highlights the difficulties of managingboth CPEO and the complications related to the ocular surface and adnexa, including…
Read Moreby Shannon Cummings, OD, Danielle Toms, OD and Michael W. Klein, OD, MS | Nov 27, 2023 | Anterior Segment, Neuro, Systemic Disease, Volume 1, Issue 3
Cavernous carotid aneurysms (CCAs) differ from other intracranial aneurysms in that most are asymptomatic and are generally considered benign as there is a low risk of rupture. More common than complications from rupture are complications from the mass effect of the aneurysm itself on nearby structures.1,2 This report describes a case of a giant right CCA that progressed in size despite multiple surgical repairs that resulted in near- complete ophthalmoplegia and neurotrophic keratitis which led to a perforated corneal ulcer and subsequent enucleation.
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