There's More to a Bergmeister's Papilla Than Which Meets the Eye
NJ01-NJ02
Correspondence
Prasanna Venkatesh Ramesh,
Medical Officer, Department of Glaucoma and Research, Mahathma Eye Hospital
Private Limited, No. 6, Tennur, Seshapuram, Trichy-620017, Tamil Nadu, India.
E-mail : email2prajann@gmail.com
A 60-year-old female presented with bilateral immature cataract with best-corrected visual acuity of 20/200 in both eyes Oculus Uterque (OU). Fundus examination of left eye Oculus Sinister (OS) (Table/Fig 1) revealed Bergmeister’s papilla. The remainder of OS examination, including the right eye Oculus Dextrus (OD), was unremarkable. Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) revealed that the Bergmeister’s papilla was creating peripapillary traction on the adjacent nasal retina with disruption of inner retinal layers (Table/Fig 2). Vigilant monitoring of traction complex following cataract surgery was advised.
Bergmeister's papillae is an uncommon anomaly that arises from the centre of the optic disc consisting of fibrous sheath, and represents the remnant of the hyaloid artery which is frequently observed as an incidental clinical finding (1). The papillae are usually asymptomatic. The Bergmeister's papillae is a developmental congenital anomaly of the embryogenic hyaloid artery, which appears at the third week of gestation and reaches the lens by the fourth or the fifth week of gestation, to form tunica vasculosa lentis, eventually undergoing complete atrophy and disappearance at birth (1). The remnant of anterior portion of the hyaloid artery is called the Mittendorf’s dot, which is commonly located on the infero-nasal aspect of the posterior lens capsule and the remnant of the posterior portion of the hyaloid artery is called the Bergmeister’s papillae which is present at the Optic Nerve Head (ONH) usually composed of glial tissue (2). In most cases, the Bergmeister’s papillae is an occasional finding with no clinical impact. But in most severe cases it can be associated with, pigmentary changes, amblyopia, posterior polar cataract, microphthalmia, persistence of primitive vitreous, vitreo-macular traction, vitreous haemorrhages and sometimes tractional retinal detachment due to contraction of the residual fibrovascular tissue [3-5]. In this case scenario (Table/Fig 2), the condition is prone to contraction of the fibrovascular tissue, which may exert traction on the retina causing peripapillary traction on the adjacent retina with disruption of inner retinal layers. For diagnosis, slit-lamp examination, fundus examination and OCT have been used. Anticipating a sequential peripapillary area vitreous thickening, vigilant monitoring needs to be done for the development of vitreo-macular traction, tractional retinal detachment or retinoschisis as they may become a possible cause of future visual deterioration (6).
Though Bergmeister’s papillae is most often inconsequential, the need for OCT evaluation in view of a rare vitreoretinal adhesion proves to be a useful non invasive test, to monitor its clinical sequelae.