Background: Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) is a rare cerebrovascular disease, it’s ocular symptoms often characterized by a subacute bilateral visual loss, or diplopia and paralysis of eye movements. Fundus examination usually presents as bilateral papilledema and other ocular signs are rare. We report a case of bilateral multiple retinal detachments and finally diagnosed as CVST.
Case presentation: A 49-year old woman with progressive headache and bilateral vision deterioration visited our clinic. Ophthaomological examinations including medical history, best-corrected visual acuity, intraocular pressure, slit-lamp biomicroscopy, fundus ophthalmoscopy, fluorescein angiography and Optical coherence tomography and head Magnetic Resonance Venogram (MRV) was also performed. Blood tests for ruling out systemic diseases were also performed. Fundus exam revealed bilateral multiple retinal detachment with sub-retinal fluid and blurred disc margin. Fluorescein angiography (FA) revealed early hypofluorescence in the background stage, multiple pinpoint leakages at the level of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), and late pooling to outline the boundary of retinal detachment, with some of the leakage shaped as multiple circles in the late stage of FA. OCT revealed retinal and choroid folds, bilateral serous effusion in the sub neuro-retinal area. Lab results showed PPD 1:2000 (+++), T-spot test were positive; Head MRV showed thrombosis formation in the left transverse venous sinus.
Conclusions: The patient demonstrated that CVST would cause retinal capillary ischemia and lead to sub-retinal lesions and retinal detachments. Cautions should be taken when patients presenting common ocular characteristics with usual systemic conditions.