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Abstract #106741 Published in IGR 23-3

Hammered silver appearance of the corneal endothelium in Fuchs uveitis syndrome: A case report

Cheng YY; Wang CY; Zheng YF; Ren MY
World journal of clinical cases 2022; 10: 13081-13087


BACKGROUND: Hammered silver appearance of the corneal endothelium is considered a characteristic change in iridocorneal-endothelial syndrome. Herein we report an interesting case of hammered silver appearance of the corneal endothelium in Fuchs uveitis syndrome (FUS). CASE SUMMARY: A 49-year-old man with progressive vision loss in the right eye for one year was admitted to our hospital. The clinical manifestations of the patient's right eye were mild conjunctival hyperemia, scattered stellate keratic precipitates on the corneal endothelium, normal depth anterior chamber, 2+ cellular reaction in the aqueous humor, diffuse iris depigmentation, absence of synechia, Koeppe nodules, opalescent lens, and vitreous opacity. FUS and a complicated cataract were diagnosed based on the typical clinical manifestations. The corneal endothelial changes were recorded in detail by slit-lamp examination, specular microscopy, and confocal microscopy before cataract extraction, revealing a hammered silver appearance of the corneal endothelium in the affected eye, a wide-band dark area, as well as irregular corneal endothelial protuberances and dark bodies of various sizes. Subsequently, the patient underwent phacoemulsification combined with intraocular lens implantation, and his postoperative visual acuity recovered to 1.0. CONCLUSION: Hammered silver appearance of the corneal endothelium in FUS, which is considered a more serious manifestation of endothelial damage, is rare and may be caused by many irregular protrusions in the corneal endothelium.

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15 Miscellaneous



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