Skip to main content
Figure 1 | BMC Ophthalmology

Figure 1

From: Acquired focal choroidal excavation associated with multiple evanescent white dot syndrome: observations at onset and a pathogenic hypothesis

Figure 1

Photographs of the right eye in a patient with multiple evanescent white dot syndrome at the initial visit (A-C) and 3 months later (D). A, Multiple white dots (white arrows) with foveal granularity extending from the posterior pole to the midperiphery were seen. Relatively large white dots were also observed in the temporal fovea (yellow arrows). B, Late-phase fluorescein angiography showing hyperfluorescence corresponding to white dots (white and yellow arrows), retinal vasculitis (black arrows), and optic disc staining. C, Late–phase indocyanine green angiography images showing multiple hypofluorescent spots scattered over a wider area than the white dots (white and yellow arrows). D, White dots spontaneously disappeared, but large white dots (yellow arrows) in the temporal fovea developed scars.

Back to article page