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  Vol. 110 No. 5, May 1992 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Choroidal neovascularization associated with choroidal hemangiomas

A. J. Ruby, L. M. Jampol, M. F. Goldberg, R. Schroeder and S. Anderson-Nelson
Department of Ophthalmology, Northwestern University, Chicago, Ill.

Two patients with choroidal hemangiomas developed choroidal neovascularization. One patient with Sturge-Weber syndrome, a unilateral diffuse choroidal hemangioma, and a serous detachment of the macula was treated with yellow dye laser photocoagulation in a grid pattern to the tumor before glaucoma filtration surgery. Four years after successful laser treatment, the patient developed subfoveal choroidal neovascularization in an area of treatment. A second patient with a circumscribed choroidal hemangioma developed spontaneous subfoveal choroidal neovascularization 12 years after initial diagnosis of the hemangioma. The development of choroidal neovascularization associated with choroidal hemangiomas represents a potential cause of poor visual outcome in these patients.





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