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Images in clinical medicine

Acute posterior vitreous detachment following a benign trauma

Acute posterior vitreous detachment following a benign trauma

Amine Ennejjar1, Taha Boutaj1,&

 

1Ophthalmology Department “A”, Ibn Sina University Hospital (Hôpital des Spécialités), Mohammed V University, Rabat, Morocco

 

 

&Corresponding author
Taha Boutaj, Ophthalmology Department “A”, Ibn Sina University Hospital (Hôpital des Spécialités), Mohammed V University, Rabat, Morocco

 

 

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We report the case of a 21-year-old male, with no medical history, who presented to the emergency room a few hours after minimal trauma. He described a floater in his left eye that happened after a minimal trauma with a soccer ball. The visual acuity was 6/20 in the left eye and 20/20 in the right eye. The pupillary light reflex was present. Intraocular pressure was normal. Slit-lamp biomicroscopic examination showed conjunctival hyperemia. The cornea, anterior chamber, iris, and lens were unremarkable. Fundoscopy of the left eye objectives a total posterior vitreous detachment with a large peripapillary Weiss ring. There was no vitreous or retinal bleeding, retinal concussion, or retinal detachment. The examination of the right eye was normal. All symptoms spontaneously resolved a week later, except myodesopsia which disappeared more weeks later.

 

 

Figure 1: fundus photography of the left eye: peripapillary Weiss ring