Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

IMI Pathologic Myopia

Kyoko Ohno‐Matsui, Pei‐Chang Wu, Kenji Yamashiro, Kritchai Vutipongsatorn, Yuxin Fang, Chui Ming Gemmy Cheung, Timothy Y. Y. Lai, Yasushi Ikuno, Salomon Y. Cohen, Alain Gaudric, Jost B. Jonas

Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science · 2021

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Summary

Pathologic myopia is a major cause of visual impairment worldwide. Pathologic myopia is distinctly different from high myopia. High myopia is a high degree of myopic refractive error, whereas pathologic myopia is defined by a presence of typical complications in the fundus (posterior staphyloma or myopic maculopathy equal to or more serious than diffuse choroidal atrophy). Pathologic myopia often occurs in eyes with high myopia, however its complications especially posterior staphyloma can also occur in eyes without high myopia. Owing to a recent advance in ocular imaging, an objective and accurate diagnosis of pathologic myopia has become possible. Especially, optical coherence tomography has revealed novel lesions like dome-shaped macula and myopic traction maculopathy. Wide-field optica

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1167/iovs.62.5.5
Catalogue ID
SNmojad09m-nqyuws
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