[Light-induced amaurosis fugax]
- PMID: 16575631
[Light-induced amaurosis fugax]
Abstract
Introduction: Internal carotid artery atherosclerotic disease may present with a wide variety of ipsilateral ocular symptoms and signs that can herald a devastating stroke. Asymptomatic retinal emboli, transient monocular visual loss (also known as amaurosis fugax) and central retinal artery occlusion are the most common.
Clinical case: A 66-year-old man presented several spells of monocular light-induced amaurosis fugax related to a severe carotid occlusive disease. Ancillary tests showed an exhausted cerebrovascular reactivity and visual evoked potentials demonstrated an increased latency. Following a carotid endarterectomy the patient remained asymptomatic and ancillary tests normalized.
Discussion: Our report supports the theory that light-induced amaurosis fugax occurs on a hemodynamic basis. A prompt recognition of this symptom is critical since symptomatic severe carotid stenosis implies a high risk of ipsilateral stroke.
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