
@article{ref1,
title="Self-inflicted laser handheld laser-induced maculopathy: a novel ocular manifestation of factitious disorder",
journal="Retinal cases and brief reports",
year="2018",
author="Rabiolo, Alessandro and Sacconi, Riccardo and Giuffrè, Chiara and Corbelli, Eleonora and Carnevali, Adriano and Querques, Lea and Sarraf, David and Freund, K. Bailey and Sadda, SriniVas and Bandello, Francesco and Querques, Giuseppe",
volume="12",
number="Suppl 1",
pages="S46-S50",
abstract="PURPOSE: To report a case of factitious self-inflicted handheld laser-induced maculopathy. <br><br>METHODS: A 29-year-old man presented to our clinic complaining of a step-wise progressive loss of vision that abruptly began in his left eye but then became bilateral. He underwent comprehensive ocular examination, including visual acuity testing, biomicroscopic, dilated funduscopic examination, structural optical coherence tomography, en face structural optical coherence tomography, optical coherence tomography angiography, fundus autofluorescence, fluorescein angiography, and indocyanine green angiography. <br><br>RESULTS: Visual acuity was 20/200 in both eyes. Although the multimodal imaging was highly consistent with handheld laser-induced maculopathy, the patient continued to deny this behavior. <br><br>CONCLUSION: Self-inflicted handheld laser-induced maculopathy may be a novel manifestation of factitious disorder. Clinical suspicion for this should remain high in the presence of the signature multimodal retinal findings despite denial by the patient. This category of patients could benefit from psychiatric referral, to prevent further ocular or extra-ocular self-injury.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1935-1089",
doi="10.1097/ICB.0000000000000640",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ICB.0000000000000640"
}