1971
DOI: 10.1016/0002-9394(71)90012-2
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Aneurysm of the Ophthalmic Artery by Drusen of the Optic Nerve Head

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1976
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Cited by 8 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The main differential diagnostic problem is not to interpret any of the aforementioned complications as signs of a bonafide optic nerve tumor, especially when large subretinal hemorrhages simulate melanotic lesions or their eventual organization into fibroglial scars suggest solid tumors or granulomata. Buried drusen have also been adventitiously associated with a temporoparietal meningioma (Ben-Zur & Lieberman, 1972) and an aneurysm of the ophthalmic artery, the latter being responsible for the visual loss (Cunningham & Sewell, 1971). The origin of buried drusen is either from the degenerative products of the nervehead glia, axons, or both.…”
Section: Glial Hamartomasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The main differential diagnostic problem is not to interpret any of the aforementioned complications as signs of a bonafide optic nerve tumor, especially when large subretinal hemorrhages simulate melanotic lesions or their eventual organization into fibroglial scars suggest solid tumors or granulomata. Buried drusen have also been adventitiously associated with a temporoparietal meningioma (Ben-Zur & Lieberman, 1972) and an aneurysm of the ophthalmic artery, the latter being responsible for the visual loss (Cunningham & Sewell, 1971). The origin of buried drusen is either from the degenerative products of the nervehead glia, axons, or both.…”
Section: Glial Hamartomasmentioning
confidence: 99%