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A 38-year-old man presented to the ophthalmology department with a four-week history of defective central vision in his right eye. Examination of the fundus of the right eye showed two discrete, yellowish-orange subretinal masses, each measuring about 2.5 mm in diameter, occupying the posterior pole and involving the macular area (long arrows, Panel A). There was localized overlying edema of the neurosensory retina (short arrows, Panel A). The left fundus was unremarkable. The appearance of the fundus in the right eye was highly characteristic of choroidal metastasis.
Two months earlier, the patient had been admitted to the medical ward with . . . [Full Text of this Article] |