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Figure 1 | BMC Ophthalmology

Figure 1

From: Increased macular choroidal blood flow velocity and decreased choroidal thickness with regression of punctate inner choroidopathy

Figure 1

Photographs of the left eye at the initial visit (A-E) and 12 months after the initial visit (F, G) in a patient with punctate inner choroidopathy (PIC). A, Fundus photograph showing multiple punctate yellow-white exudates at the level of the retinal pigment epithelium in the posterior pole. B, Fluorescein angiography 600 second after dye injection showing hyperfluorescence corresponding to the exudates. C, The initial phase of indocyanine green angiography showing hypofluorescence corresponding to the lesions. D, E, Horizontal optical coherence tomography (OCT) image through the fovea shows the loss of photoreceptor inner/outer segment junction (IS/OS) integrity in the nasal area of the fovea (D, arrows), and exudate appearing as a massive, moderately reflective lesion extending from the outer nuclear layer to the choroid (E, arrow). F, The lesion was pigmented with some scarring. G, Horizontal cross-sectional OCT showed the recovery of IS/OS integrity.

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