Presence of retinal and/or vitreous traction in approximately all the cases
Presents at any age
Mostly unilateral
Ingestion of larvae leads to the infection
P/E:presence of granuloma and retinal traction
Ultrasound imaging:
Peripheral mass
Vitreoretinal band
Traction retinal detachment
Presence of eosinophils in the anterior chamber tap
Classified into three subtypes:
Macular granuloma
Peripheral granuloma
Endophthalmitis
Hereditary retinal syndrome
Generally causes vitreoretinal traction and ocular inflammation not seen in retinoblastoma
Fundus examination reveals the characteristic signs
Differentiating features of some common and less common differential diagnosis are:
Disease/Condition
Age of presentation
Risk factors
Unilateral/bilateral
Differentiating Signs/Symptoms
Axial length
Imaging findings
Retinoblastoma
< 3 years of age in 90%
Family history
Unilateral/bilateral
Leukocoria
Normal
USG:Intraretinal/subretinal mass with calcification
Congenital Cataract
Presents at birth
Lens opacification rare in retinoblastoma
Fundus examination reveals lens opacification
Ultrasound shows increased echogenicity of lens
Coats disease (exudative retinitis or retinal telangiectasis)
Most cases are unilateral
Mean age at presentation is 6 years
More common in males
Fundus examination: lesion appears more yellow-colored (versus chalky white-gray in retinoblastoma); telangiectatic and aneurysmal retinal vessels are characteristic of Coats disease but uncommon in retinoblastoma
Spectral domain optical coherence tomography may be helpful in distinguishing Coats disease from retinoblastoma
Ophthalmic ultrasound: can be misleading because calcification can also be seen in Coats disease
Persistent fetal vasculature (formerly known as persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous)
Associated with a micro-ophthalmic eye (a small, malformed eye)
Often associated with a cataract (rare in retinoblastoma)
Congenital (retinoblastoma uncommonly presents at birth)
Dragging of the ciliary processes on exam
Measurement of axial length using fundus examination and ultrasound shows short axial length in persistent fetal vasculature
Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP)
Generally occurs in premature children given high-dose oxygen
Can result in total retinal detachment
Fundus examination: reveals gliotic-appearing retina, which is different from the retinal detachment associated with retinoblastoma
Ocular toxocariasis
Generally causes vitreoretinal traction and ocular inflammation not seen in retinoblastoma
Fundus examination reveals the characteristic signs
↑Butros LJ, Abramson DH, Dunkel IJ (March 2002). "Delayed diagnosis of retinoblastoma: analysis of degree, cause, and potential consequences". Pediatrics. 109 (3): E45. PMID11875173.
↑Sachdeva R, Schoenfield L, Marcotty A, Singh AD (June 2011). "Retinoblastoma with autoinfarction presenting as orbital cellulitis". J AAPOS. 15 (3): 302–4. doi:10.1016/j.jaapos.2011.02.013. PMID21680213.