Retinal Detachment
Basics
Basics
Basics
Description
Description
- 3 types with common final pathway:
- Rhegmatogenous retinal detachments (RRD)
- Tractional retinal detachments (TRD)
- Exudative retinal detachments (ERD)
- RRD:
- Most common
- Break or tear of sensory retina allows vitreous fluid to separate the sensory and pigmented parts of retina from each other
- Acute event, flashes secondary to tearing of nerve fibers, floaters secondary to bleeding
- TRD:
- Contraction of fibrous vitreous bands, as a result of previous insult, pulls the sensory retina off the pigmented retina
- Chronic and progressive
- Asymptomatic unless hemorrhage or retinal tear occurs
- ERD:
- Subretinal fluid accumulates and separate retinal layers without violating either layer
- Do not usually require surgery
- Usually secondary systemic disease such as severe acute hypertension, sarcoid, cancer
Etiology
Etiology
- RRD:
- Myopia
- Cataract surgery
- Marfan syndrome
- Structural degeneration of underlying anatomy of vitreous body, sensory or pigmented retina
- Trauma
- TRD:
- Proliferative diabetic retinopathy
- Vasculopathy
- Perforating injury
- Chorioretinitis:
- Retinopathy of prematurity, sickle cell disease, or toxocariasis
- Trauma
- ERD:
- Malignant hypertension, preeclampsia
- Tumors of the choroid or retina (melanoma, retinoblastoma)
- Inflammatory disorders (Coats or Harada disease, posterior scleritis)
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