Purpose: To report a novel finding in patients with Fabry disease, that is, the observation by adaptive optics ophthalmoscopy of intracellular lipidic deposits in retinal vessels.
Methods: Observational two-center case series. Eighteen patients with genetically proven Fabry disease underwent flood-illumination adaptive optics ophthalmoscopy imaging (rtx1; Imagine Eyes, Orsay, France) of retinal vessels.
Results: Fourteen patients (78% of all patients; 7 of the 10 women and 7 of the 8 men) showed paravascular punctuate or linear opacities in both eyes. In the least-affected patients, these were seen only in the wall of precapillary arterioles as discrete spots of 5 µm to 10 µm large, whereas in those more severely affected, capillaries and first-order vessels were also involved with diffuse opacification of the wall. These deposits sometime showed a striated pattern, suggesting colocalization with vascular smooth muscle cells.
Conclusion: Adaptive optics ophthalmoscopy of retinal vessels may be of interest for patients with Fabry disease, providing noninvasive, gradable evaluation of microvascular involvement.