Department of Clinical Neurological Sciences and Department of Ophthalmology (JAF), Western University, London, Canada ; Department of Ophthalmology (PAS), State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York; Moorfields Eye Hospital (AP), London, United Kingdom; Department of Neurology (AP), Amsterdam Neuroscience, VUmc MS Center Amsterdam and Dutch Expertise Centre for Neuro-ophthalmology, VU University Medical Centre, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Institute of Neurology (AP), University College London, London, United Kingdom; Department of Eye Pathology (CT), UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, London, United Kingdom; Moorfields Eye Hospital (CT), London, United Kingdom ; and Department of Ophthalmology (SH), Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
J Neuroophthalmol. 2021 Dec 1;41(4):431-441. doi: 10.1097/WNO.0000000000001203.
With the development and widespread adoption of spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (OCT), peripapillary hyper-reflective ovoid mass-like structures (PHOMS) have become a frequent OCT finding in neuro-ophthalmic practice. Although originally assumed to represent a form of buried optic disc drusen (ODD), PHOMS differ from ODD in many important ways. The histopathological underpinnings of PHOMS are now becoming more clearly understood.
Review of literature.
PHOMS can be broadly classified as disk edema-associated PHOMS, ODD-associated PHOMS, or anomalous disk-associated PHOMS. PHOMS are seen in many conditions, including papilledema, nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy, central retinal vein occlusion, acute demyelinating optic neuritis, ODD, and tilted disks (myopic obliquely inserted disks) and in many cases resolve along with the underlying condition. The histopathological study of these diverse entities reveals the common feature of a bulge of optic nerve fibers herniating centrifugally over Bruch membrane opening into the peripapillary space, correlating exactly with the location, shape, and space-occupying nature of PHOMS on OCT. Because of the radial symmetry of these herniating optic nerve fibers, PHOMS are best thought of as a complete or partial torus (i.e., donut) in 3 dimensions.
PHOMS are a common but nonspecific OCT marker of axoplasmic stasis in the optic nerve head. They are not themselves ODD or ODD precursors, although they can be seen in association with ODD and a wide spectrum of other conditions. They do not exclude papilledema and often accompany it. The circumferential extent and characteristic 3D toroidal nature of a PHOMS are best appreciated by scrolling through consecutive OCT images.
随着谱域光相干断层扫描(OCT)的发展和广泛应用,神经眼科实践中发现视盘周围高反射卵圆形团块样结构(PHOMS)变得越来越常见。虽然最初假定 PHOMS 代表一种埋藏性视盘玻璃膜疣(ODD),但 PHOMS 在许多重要方面与 ODD 不同。PHOMS 的组织病理学基础现在越来越清楚。
文献回顾。
PHOMS 可广泛分为盘水肿相关 PHOMS、ODD 相关 PHOMS 或异常盘相关 PHOMS。PHOMS 可见于多种疾病,包括视乳头水肿、非动脉炎性前部缺血性视神经病变、视网膜中央静脉阻塞、急性脱髓鞘性视神经炎、ODD 和倾斜盘(近视性斜插入盘),并且在许多情况下会随基础疾病而消退。对这些不同实体的组织病理学研究揭示了一个共同特征,即视神经纤维膨出离心地穿过 Bruch 膜开口进入视盘周围间隙,与 OCT 上 PHOMS 的位置、形状和占位性质完全一致。由于这些膨出的视神经纤维呈放射状对称,因此 PHOMS 最好被认为是一个完整或部分的环(即圆环)。
PHOMS 是视神经头轴浆停滞的常见但非特异性 OCT 标志物。它们本身不是 ODD 或 ODD 前体,尽管它们可以与 ODD 和广泛的其他疾病同时出现。它们不排除视乳头水肿,并且常常伴随发生。通过滚动连续的 OCT 图像,可以更好地了解 PHOMS 的周向范围和特征性 3D 环形状。