Peripheral bright streaks in tuberous sclerosis

Am J Ophthalmol Case Rep. 2021 Feb 26:22:101050. doi: 10.1016/j.ajoc.2021.101050. eCollection 2021 Jun.

Abstract

Purpose: To describe the finding of bright hyperautofluorescent streaks in the peripheral retina in tuberous sclerosis.

Observations: A woman with a pathogenic TSC1 mutation and cutaneous manifestations of tuberous sclerosis underwent fundus examination and was found to have a cluster of thin, yellowish streaks in the inferior peripheral fundus of her left eye. The streaks were hyperautofluorescent in blue light and associated with irregular thickening of the photoreceptor-pigment epithelium complex on optical coherence tomography.

Conclusions and importance: The cluster of outer retinal abnormalities in a sector of the peripheral retina in one eye of a TSC1 patient has features in common with the more centrally located and less numerous lesions called achromatic patches. The resemblance of the streak pattern with the pattern of hypoautofluorescence in X-linked retinopathies suggests that the streaks may represent a clone of cells derived from a single somatic mutation in TSC1. The identification of this lesion type expands the scope of conditions that can be diagnosed by fundus imaging.

Keywords: Fundus autofluorescence; Fundus photography; Optical coherence tomography; Retina; Tuberous sclerosis.

Publication types

  • Case Reports