To report multimodality diagnostic imaging in a case of unilateral acute idiopathic maculopathy.
Case summaryA 32-year-old woman with reduced vision in the right eye had experienced fatigue and flu-like symptoms, including sore throat and fever a few days before. Her best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) was 1.0 in the right eye. There were no cells in the anterior chamber and vitreous. Fundus photographs of the right eye on presentation showed gray-white thickening of the fovea and retinal hemorrhage next to the fovea. Fluorescein angiography demonstrated ring-shaped mottled hyperfluorescence in the early phase and dye pooling in the late phase. Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (OCT) showed abnormal hyper-reflective thickening at the level of the outer retina and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and detachment of the neurosensory retina in the foveal lesion. The inner segment/outer segment junction and photoreceptor elevation/disruption was noted. Nineteen months after onset, the BCVA of the right eye was 1.0 and fundus photographs showed increased retinal pigment hyperplasia, and residual RPE changes resembling a bull's eye maculopathy. The OCT of the right macula showed that the inner segment/outer segment junction elevation/disruption almost completely regressed. The patient was diagnosed with unilateral acute idiopathic maculopathy.
ConclusionsWe report a typical case with flu-like symptoms of unilateral acute idiopathic maculopathy. It is a very rare macular disease and a case such as ours with long-term follow-up using multimodality diagnostic imaging has not been previously reported.