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Coats disease

Description

Coats disease is a non-inherited condition characterized by the presence of unilateral retinal telangiectasias, exudation, and exudative retinal detachment, mainly in young patients. The disease is more common in males and usually occurs unilaterally, with an average age of onset between 2 and 8 years. Arteriolar telangiectasias cause subretinal and intraretinal exudation of fluid and lipids, which may eventually lead to exudative retinal detachment and vision loss.

Comments

After evaluating the patient with multimodal imaging, we observed multiple telangiectasias and aneurysmal dilatations in the inferotemporal periphery. The exudative picture is striking and makes us suspect the presence of a vasoproliferative tumor (VPT).

Indication

We present a 21-year-old woman referred for study of macular exudation in her left eye.