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Aripiprazole-induced Chorioretinopathy: Multimodal Imaging and Electrophysiological Features

Overview
Journal Doc Ophthalmol
Specialty Ophthalmology
Date 2015 Mar 21
PMID 25791769
Citations 9
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Abstract

Purpose: To report the first documented case of aripiprazole-induced chorioretinopathy.

Methods And Results: A 47-year-old schizophrenic patient with loss of vision due to an atypical retinopathy was investigated. She had been treated with aripiprazole for 8 years. Multimodal imaging showed in the right eye a large area of retinal atrophy predominating in the outer retina, including the posterior pole up to the upper temporal periphery, and in the left eye a serous retinal detachment. The electroretinogram exhibited decreased and delayed responses of both the rod and cone systems; the electrooculogram showed no light peak.

Conclusion: Aripiprazole, an atypical antipsychotic, was introduced more recently than the antipsychotics commonly incriminated in chorioretinopathies, such as thioridazine. Optical coherence tomography was not used to document former cases of antipsychotic-related chorioretinopathies. Although pathophysiological mechanisms are poorly understood, imaging of the present case points toward an involvement of the retinal pigmentary epithelium. Clinicians should be aware of the potential chorioretinal toxicity of new atypical antipsychotics.

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