This progressive retinal degeneration results from abnormal production of photoreceptor proteins. It presents as multiple, punctate white spots with attenuated vessels and bone spicules
This oral medication is given when a patient has acute angle closure with extremely high eye pressure
What is Diamox/Acetazolamide
300
This asymptomatic condition presents as bilateral, symmetric, round, yellow-white deposits scattered throughout the posterior pole and nasal to the optic disc. It is usually apparent by the 2nd-3rd decade of life.
This glaucoma medication may put a patient at higher risk for retinal detachment
What is Pilocarpine
400
This condition is characterized by slowly progressive loss of central vision (worse during the day), dyschromatopsia, and photophobia with patchy atrophy in the macula that develops in the first to third decades.
This hereditary condition is characterized by nystagmus, strabismus, high myopia, diffuse iris transillumination, foveal hypoplasia, and fundus hypopigmentation
The side effects of this class of glaucoma drugs include skin darkening around the eyes and iris heterochromia
What are prostaglandins
500
This vascular tumor is composed of clumps of intraretinal aneurysms filled with dark venous blood. Fine, gray epiretinal membranes may cover the tumor. It is typically unilateral
This condition presents as progressive, bilateral retinal degeneration with well-circumscribed, scalloped areas of chorioretinal atrophy that enlarge and coalesce. Patients develop nyctalopia, constricted visual fields, and decreased vision by their second decade.