## Correct Answer: B. Pseudoexfoliation syndrome Pseudoexfoliation syndrome (PXF) is a systemic disorder characterized by deposition of abnormal fibrillar material on ocular and extraocular tissues. The hallmark clinical finding is white, fluffy material visible on the anterior lens capsule, typically in a characteristic pattern: a central disc with a clear intermediate zone and a peripheral granular zone. This pathognomonic appearance on slit-lamp examination is diagnostic. PXF is strongly associated with open-angle glaucoma (PXF glaucoma), which occurs in 25–50% of affected individuals and is more aggressive than primary open-angle glaucoma. The condition is more prevalent in Scandinavian populations but is increasingly recognized in Indian patients, particularly in the elderly. The fibrillar material is composed of abnormal elastic microfibrils and is not merely exfoliated lens capsule (hence the misnomer). Diagnosis is clinical, based on the characteristic anterior chamber findings. Management focuses on glaucoma screening and treatment, as IOP elevation is the primary complication. The presence of this material on the lens capsule, combined with the risk of secondary glaucoma, makes pseudoexfoliation syndrome the correct diagnosis in this presentation. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Intraocular foreign body** — This is wrong because intraocular foreign bodies present with acute trauma history, corneal/scleral entry wounds, and visible foreign material within the globe (often on imaging). They do not produce the characteristic white fibrillar deposits on the anterior lens capsule seen in PXF. Foreign bodies require urgent surgical removal and are a medical emergency, whereas PXF is a chronic, progressive condition managed medically. **C. Ocular trauma** — This is wrong because ocular trauma is an acute event with a clear history of injury, whereas PXF is a chronic, age-related systemic disorder without antecedent trauma. Trauma may cause hyphema, corneal abrasion, or iridodialysis—not the pathognomonic white exfoliative material on the lens capsule. This option represents a common NBE trap for students who see 'white deposits' and assume acute injury. **D. Vossius ring** — This is wrong because a Vossius ring is a pigmented (brown/golden) deposit on the anterior lens capsule caused by iris pigment dispersion following blunt ocular trauma or in pigment dispersion syndrome. It is not white or fibrillar and has a different etiology (pigment, not elastic microfibrils). Vossius ring is a sign of trauma or pigmentary disease, not a systemic fibrillar deposition disorder like PXF. ## High-Yield Facts - **Pseudoexfoliation syndrome** presents with white, fluffy fibrillar material on the anterior lens capsule in a three-zone pattern (central disc, clear intermediate zone, peripheral granular zone). - **PXF glaucoma** occurs in 25–50% of pseudoexfoliation patients and is more aggressive, with higher IOP and faster visual field loss than POAG. - **Systemic associations** include hypertension, cardiovascular disease, and chronic kidney disease; screening for these is recommended in PXF patients. - **Diagnosis is clinical** via slit-lamp examination; no imaging or laboratory test is required for confirmation. - **Management** focuses on IOP control with topical agents (prostaglandin analogues first-line in India) and regular glaucoma monitoring; laser trabeculoplasty or surgery if needed. ## Mnemonics **PXF Lens Capsule Pattern: 'CIP'** **C**entral disc (white material) → **I**ntermediate clear zone → **P**eripheral granular zone. Helps recall the pathognomonic three-zone appearance on slit-lamp. **PXF Glaucoma Risk: '50-50'** Approximately **50% of PXF patients develop glaucoma**, and it is **50% more aggressive** than POAG. Use this to remember the high-risk nature and need for aggressive IOP management. ## NBE Trap NBE often pairs white anterior chamber deposits with trauma (foreign body, Vossius ring) to trap students who do not recognize the pathognomonic fibrillar pattern and three-zone distribution of PXF. The key discriminator is the chronic, non-traumatic presentation and the specific morphology on slit-lamp. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, PXF is increasingly recognized in elderly patients presenting with secondary glaucoma. Always perform slit-lamp examination in any patient with elevated IOP to look for the characteristic white deposits; early recognition allows timely glaucoma management and systemic screening (BP, renal function, cardiovascular status), which can prevent blindness and identify comorbidities. _Reference: Robbins Ch. 29 (Eye pathology); Harrison Ch. 406 (Glaucoma); Parson's Diseases of the Eye (Pseudoexfoliation syndrome)_
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