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OphthalmologyMarch 201134 citations

Retinal and optic nerve head pathology in Susac's syndrome.

McLeod D Scott, Ying Howard S, McLeod Colin A, Grebe Rhonda, Lubow Martin, Susac John O, Lutty Gerard A


AI Summary

This study of Susac's syndrome pathology found vaso-occlusive changes, serous deposits compressing retinal vessels, and endothelial dysfunction. This suggests SS is an endotheliopathy, explaining clinical "string of pearls" and arterial plaques.

Abstract

Purpose

This article describes the first retinal histopathologic findings in a patient with Susac's syndrome (SS).

Design

Observational case report.

Participant: A 51-year-old white woman diagnosed with SS.

Methods

Eyes from a 51-year-old white woman diagnosed with SS were obtained at autopsy. One retina was dissected and processed for adenosine diphosphatase (ADPase) flat embedding. Selected areas were processed further for transmission electron microscopy.

Main outcome measures

Histopathologic examination using ADPase flat-embedding technique.

Results

There were vaso-occlusive changes in the retinal periphery resulting in small areas of capillary dropout. Cross-sections demonstrated serous filled spaces between the retinal blood vessels and the internal limiting membrane. Lumens adjacent to these spaces appeared compressed and sometimes closed, but without thrombosis. Decreased ADPase activity in some peripheral blood vessels suggested endothelial cell dysfunction and vaso-occlusion. In the optic nerve head, numerous corpora amylacea were observed in the vicinity of capillaries with thickened walls and narrow lumens. Transmission electron microscopy demonstrated thickened and amorphous vascular basal lamina and open endothelial cell junctions in some retinal blood vessels.

Conclusions

The serous deposits with compression of retinal vessel lumens observed histologically probably represent the so-called string of pearls described clinically in SS. Chronic extension of these serous deposits along the vessel wall possibly are the cause of retinal arterial wall plaques as described by Gass and other investigators. In the optic nerve head, corpora amylacea are probably a result of microinfarcts resulting from optic nerve head capillary angiopathy. Accumulation of amorphous material in the basal lamina, loss of viable endothelial cells, and capillary dropout suggest that SS may be an endotheliopathy.


MeSH Terms

ApyraseFemaleHumansMicroscopy, Electron, TransmissionMiddle AgedOptic DiskOptic Nerve DiseasesRetinal DiseasesRetinal VesselsSusac Syndrome

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