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2.
J Fr Ophtalmol ; 29(5): 559-63, 2006 May.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16885832

ABSTRACT

Uveal melanoma is very rare in children, and in both adults and children it can in rare cases develop intralesional cavities resembling an intraocular cyst. The presence of a solid mass at the base and a thick wall surrounding the cavity can assist in differentiating cavitary melanoma from a benign cyst. We report the case of a 5-year-old girl who presented with a large intraocular pigmented mass in the left eye, showing multiple hollow cavities on ocular ultrasonography, CT scan, and MRI. The patient was treated by enucleation and the pathology confirmed the diagnosis of choroidal melanoma. FISH revealed no aberration in chromosome 3.


Subject(s)
Choroid Neoplasms , Melanoma , Child, Preschool , Choroid Neoplasms/diagnosis , Choroid Neoplasms/surgery , Female , Humans , Melanoma/diagnosis , Melanoma/surgery
3.
J Fr Ophtalmol ; 23(10): 985-95, 2000 Dec.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11139690

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To evaluate the occurrence and inheritance of various types of pigmentary retinopathy in patients followed at the outpatient clinic in the university hospital, Montpellier, France. To characterize genes and mutations causing these conditions. METHODS: Ophthalmic examination and various visual tests were performed. Mutations were sought from genomic DNA by PCR amplification of exons associated with single-strand conformation analysis and/or direct sequencing. RESULTS: Among 315 patients over an 8-year period, cases of retinitis pigmentosa (63.2%), Usher's syndrome (10.2%), Stargardt's disease (5.4%), choroideremia (3.2%), Leber's congenital amaurosis (3.2%), congenital stationary night blindness (2.9%), cone dystrophy (2.5%), dominant optic atrophy (1.9%), X-linked juvenile retinoschisis (1.6%), Best's disease (1.6%), and others (4.3%) were diagnosed. In retinitis pigmentosa, inheritance could be determined in 54.2% of the cases including dominant autosomic (26.6%), recessive autosomic (22.6%), and X-linked cases (5%) while it could not be confirmed in 45.7% of the cases (simplex cases in the majority). For the 6 examined genes, mutations were found in 22 out of 182 propositus (12.1%). Analysis of phenotype-genotype correlations indicates that in retinitis pigmentosa, RDS is more frequently associated with macular involvement and retinal flecks, RHO with regional disease, and RPE65 with the great severity of the disease with some cases of Leber's congenital amaurosis. CONCLUSIONS: Identification of genes may help in diagnosis and in genetic counseling, especially in simplex cases with retinitis pigmentosa. In this latter condition, molecular diagnosis will be necessary to rationalize future treatments.


Subject(s)
Alkyl and Aryl Transferases , Chromosome Mapping , Extracellular Matrix Proteins/genetics , Eye Diseases, Hereditary/genetics , Eye Proteins/genetics , Intermediate Filament Proteins/genetics , Membrane Glycoproteins , Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Proteins/genetics , Retinal Degeneration/genetics , Retinitis Pigmentosa/genetics , rab GTP-Binding Proteins/genetics , Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing , Adolescent , Adult , Carrier Proteins , Child , France , Humans , Mutation , Peripherins , Polymerase Chain Reaction , cis-trans-Isomerases
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