Progressive bifocal chorioretinal atrophy
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| Progressive bifocal chorioretinal atrophy | |
|---|---|
| Specialty | Medical genetics |
| Complications | Blindness |
| Causes | Point mutation in genetic region close to the PDRM13 gene. |
| Deaths | None are directly related to it |
Progressive bifocal chorioretinal atrophy, also known for its abbreviations PBCRA or CRAPB,[1] is a rare, slowly progressive, autosomal dominant syndrome characterized by relatively large-sized atrophic hole-shaped lesions in the macular and nasal retina, myopia, low visual acuity, and nystagmus.[2][3] It has been described in one family from Scotland and two families from France.[4] The condition is caused by point mutations in a region in the long arm of chromosome 6 (6q16.2) that has been found responsible for the pathogenesis of other macular dystrophies.[4]
Electro-oculographic and electroretinographic studies done on patients with the disease show abnormalities in the way cones and rods function.[5]
Color vision has been found to be relatively unaffected in patients with the condition.[6]