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Visual Impairment in Pseudoxanthoma Elasticum: A Survey of 40 Patients.

BACKGROUND: Pseudoxanthoma elasticum is an inherited disorder of connective tissue characterized, among other symptoms, by impaired vision.

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the nature and age of onset of ophthalmologic manifestations in pseudoxanthoma elasticum.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Forty consecutive patients affected with pseudoxanthoma elasticum underwent measurements of their refractive error and visual acuity, together with slit-lamp examination.

RESULTS: The mean age of the patients (8 M, 32 F) was 43.35 years. Fifty-seven eyes (33 patients, mean age: 40.75 years) had a BCVA >20/50 whereas 23 eyes in 16 patients (mean age: 53.31 years) had ≤20/50. Seven patients (17.50%), all but one over 52 years old, were visually disabled. BCVA ≤20/50 in at least one eye was observed in 73.33% of patients of 52 years old or older and in 20.00% of patients younger than 52, respectively. Angioid streaks were observed in 75 eyes (93.75%) and extended toward the macula in 51 eyes from 29 patients. Macular involvement was observed for the first time at a mean age of 44.28 years. Neovascularization was observed in 28 eyes (17 patients; mean age: 51.70 years), all with poor BCVA.

CONCLUSION: Macular choroidal neovascularization is frequent in pseudoxanthoma elasticum, and accounts for the poor ophthalmologic natural history of the disease. Patients should be advised to self-monitor their visual acuity using the Amsler grid. The frequency of choroidal neovascularization appears age-dependent, suggesting that bi-yearly fundus examination is appropriate in young patients whereas patients older than 40 should be examined twice a year.

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