Background/purpose: Optical coherence tomography angiography has been used to evaluate the posterior segment in a wide variety of pathologies because it is a noninvasive image technique, but its role in the evaluation of the retina in a case of carotid cavernous sinus fistula has not been described yet.
Methods Results: We present a patient who consulted with spontaneous left superior eyelid hematoma and was diagnosed with left indirect carotid cavernous sinus fistula. In this study, optical coherence tomography angiography was used to evaluate the different macular capillary plexuses in a patient with carotid cavernous sinus fistula and a clinical situation of secondary local venous stasis before and after percutaneous embolization.
Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) has become a reliable and powerful tool working as a complement to the traditional physical examination. It has proven to be a reliable and reproducible method to a quicker and safer diagnosis, sometimes surpassing the diagnostic accuracy of more traditional techniques. We present two cases of pulmonary embolism (PE) with clinical presentations that suggested other diagnoses, prior to the performance of POCUS: a 60-year-old patient with nausea and vomiting and a 66-year-old female with a week-long progressive increase of shortness of breath and increased peripheral edema.
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