Abstract

Clinical record Patient 1 A 90-year-old man with bilateral neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD) presented with sudden onset of painful visual loss in his left eye. Visual acuity in his right eye was 1/60 due to scarring associated with AMD, and visual acuity in his left eye had deteriorated to hand movements; it had previously been 6/120. He had been taking warfarin for about 2 years for atrial fibrillation and a transient ischaemic attack. The international normalised ratio (INR) had previously been measured almost weekly, but as it had been stable at 2.5–2.9 (target INR, 2.0–3.0), it had not been measured for 6 weeks. B-mode ultrasonography and dilated fundus examination revealed massive suprachoroidal haemorrhage (Figures A and B). The INR was 6.0, which was reversed with intravenous administration of two units of fresh frozen plasma and 1 mg of vitamin K. Visual acuity in the patient’s left eye deteriorated to light perception. As there were no signs of spontaneous improvement and this had been his better eye, surgery was performed to drain the haemorrhage. After surgery, the haemorrhage decreased in size but his vision did not improve.

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