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Correspondence
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- Correspondence
Quizzical optical coherence tomography
Canadian Journal of OphthalmologyVol. 51Issue 5e152Published online: July 31, 2016- Mark E. Seamone
- Netan Choudhry
- John Chen
- John Galic
- R. Rishi Gupta
Cited in Scopus: 0We often question our diagnoses, but how often does your diagnosis question you? A patient was referred for surgical management of an epiretinal membrane. During the encounter, she asked many intelligent questions. Amazingly, the optical coherence tomography of her macula seemed to reflect her quizzical nature and was found to have a question (mark) of its own! (Fig. 1) - Correspondence
Eye love you
Canadian Journal of OphthalmologyVol. 51Issue 1e3–e4Published in issue: February, 2016- Mark E. Seamone
- Netan Choudhry
- Michael Kapusta
- Kashif Baig
- John Chen
- John Galic
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 0Valentine’s Day is a time to say “I love you”; however, the term “eye love you” is rarely, if ever, used. In this article, we present rare cases of ocular pathology that have adopted a heart-shaped appearance. Cupid’s cornea (Fig. 1A) demonstrates a heart-shaped endothelial fungal plaque associated with metallic foreign body. Aphrodite’s atrophy (Fig. 1B) represents a fundus autofluorescence image of geographic atrophy that demonstrated a heart-shaped hypoautofluorescence. Finally, lover’s laser (Fig.