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Volume 23, Number 7—July 2017
Research

Novel Retinal Lesion in Ebola Survivors, Sierra Leone, 2016

Paul J. SteptoeComments to Author , Janet T. Scott, Julia M. Baxter, Craig K. Parkes, Rahul Dwivedi, Gabriela Czanner, Matthew J. Vandy, Fayiah Momorie, Alimamy D. Fornah, Patrick Komba, Jade Richards, Foday Sahr, Nicholas A.V. Beare, and Malcolm G. Semple
Author affiliations: University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK (P.J. Steptoe, J.T. Scott, G. Czanner, N.A.V. Beare, M.G. Semple); Royal Liverpool Hospital, Liverpool (P.J. Steptoe, J.M. Baxter, C.K. Parkes, R. Dwivedi, N.A.V. Beare); National Institute for Health Research Health Protection Research Unit in Emerging and Zoonotic Infections, Liverpool (J.T. Scott, M.G. Semple); Connaught Hospital, Freetown, Sierra Leone (M.J. Vandy); 34th Military Hospital, Freetown (F. Momorie, A.D. Fornah, P. Komba, F. Sahr); Public Health England Laboratory, Makeni, Sierra Leone (J. Richards)

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Figure 1

Prevalence of retinal scar lesion types in a case–control study of ocular signs in Ebola virus disease survivors, Sierra Leone, 2016. Type 1, uniform pigmented lesion; type 2, uniform pigmented lesion with grey halo; type 3, uniform pigmented lesion with lacunae; type 4, pigmented lesion with deep surrounding atrophy; type 5, previously described lesion attributed to Ebola (8); type 6, angulated lesions (peripaplllary and/or peripheral); type 7, indistinct small pigmented lesions; type 8, irregu

Figure 1. Prevalence of retinal scar lesion types in a case–control study of ocular signs in Ebola virus disease survivors, Sierra Leone, 2016. Type 1, uniform pigmented lesion; type 2, uniform pigmented lesion with gray halo; type 3, uniform pigmented lesion with lacunae; type 4, pigmented lesion with deep surrounding atrophy; type 5, previously described lesion attributed to Ebola (8); type 6, angulated lesions (peripapillary and/or peripheral); type 7, indistinct small pigmented lesions; type 8, irregularly pigmented vascular projection lesion; type 9, pigmented curvilinear peripheral bands; type 10, optic disc projection to macula lesion. Error bars indicate 97.5% CI. Asterisk indicates statistical significance (p<0.01) based on Fisher exact statistic value (2.7 × 105).

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