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Fig. 1 | BMC Ophthalmology

Fig. 1

From: A case of bilateral endogenous endophthalmitis misdiagnosed as Purtscher’s retinopathy

Fig. 1

Fundus photographs of both eyes on presentation (a and b) and ten days later (c and d) in a woman who complained of decreased vision and distortion in the right eye forty-two days after thoracoabdominal trauma. On presentation, dilated veins (a and b, arrow) and oval white retinal lesions (a and b, double arrows) were observed in both eyes. In addition, linearly shaped hemorrhage (a, triangle) and cotton-wool spots (b, star) were found at the posterior pole. Ten days later, the four separated oval retinal lesions joined together (c, arrow) with star-shaped hard exudates and radial folds (c, double arrows) in the macula of the right eye. At the same time, the linear hemorrhage (c, triangle) disappeared. In the left eye, the two cotton-wool spots near the optic disc faded away (d, star)

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