Review of choroidal osteomas

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Medknow Publications

Abstract

Choroidal osteomas are rare benign ossifying tumors that appear as irregular slightly elevated, yellow-white, juxtapapillary, choroidal mass with well-defined geographic borders, depigmentation of the overlying pigment epithelium; and with multiple small vascular networks on the tumor surface. Visual loss results from three mechanisms: Atrophy of the retinal pigment epithelium overlying a decalcified osteoma; serous retinal detachment over the osteoma from decompensated retinal pigment epithelium, and most commonly from choroidal neovascularization. Recent evidence points to the beneficial effects of intravitreal vascular endothelial growth factor antagonists in improving visual acuity in serous retinal detachment with or without choroidal neovascularization.

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Argon laser, Choroidal osteoma, Intravitreal bevacizumab, Intravitreal ranibizumab, Photodynamic therapy, Calcinosis, Choristoma, Choroid neoplasms, Humans, Osteoma, Bevacizumab, Ranibizumab, Autofluorescence imaging, Calcification, Choroid melanoma, Choroid tumor, Choroidal hemangioma, Choroidal metastasis, Computer assisted tomography, Differential diagnosis, Echography, Eye tumor, Human, Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging, Ocular calcification, Optical coherence tomography, Pathophysiology, Pigment epithelium, Prevalence, Priority journal, Prognosis, Retina detachment, Retina fluorescein angiography, Review, Subretinal fluid, Subretinal neovascularization, Systematic review, Transpupillary thermotherapy, Treatment indication, Visual acuity, Visual impairment

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