## Correct Answer: C. Exudative RD The **shifting fluid sign** (also called **mobile subretinal fluid** or **gravitational fluid shift**) is a pathognomonic finding in **exudative retinal detachment (ERD)**. This sign occurs because the subretinal fluid is serous/proteinaceous and non-loculated, allowing it to move freely with gravity and head position changes. When the patient changes posture (supine to upright, or lateral positioning), the fluid layer shifts within the subretinal space, causing the superior border of the detachment to move downward—a dynamic, real-time phenomenon visible on examination or imaging. In contrast, rhegmatogenous RD has loculated fluid trapped by retinal breaks and vitreous traction, preventing such mobility. Exudative RD results from breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier (diabetic macular edema, Harada disease, posterior scleritis, choroidal hemangioma, or metastatic disease) without any retinal break. The shifting fluid sign is therefore a cardinal clinical sign that distinguishes ERD from other types and helps guide diagnosis toward underlying choroidal/systemic pathology. Indian textbooks (Parson's Diseases of the Eye, Bailey & Love) emphasize this sign as a key discriminator in the bedside examination of retinal detachment. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Traction RD** — Traction RD is caused by proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR) or advanced diabetic retinopathy, where fibroglial membranes mechanically pull the retina inward. The subretinal fluid is trapped and immobile—there is no gravitational shift. The detachment is fixed and non-mobile, making the shifting fluid sign absent. This is a key differentiating feature from exudative RD. **B. Lacrimal Retinal dialysis** — Retinal dialysis is a circumferential separation of the retina from the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), typically at the equator, often from blunt ocular trauma. It is a form of rhegmatogenous RD with a retinal break. The subretinal fluid is trapped by the break and vitreous traction, preventing fluid mobility. The shifting fluid sign does not occur because the fluid is loculated and non-gravitational. **D. Rhegmatogenous RD** — Rhegmatogenous RD results from a retinal break (hole or tear) allowing vitreous fluid to seep into the subretinal space. The fluid is trapped by the break and vitreous traction, creating a fixed, non-mobile detachment. Unlike exudative RD, there is no free-flowing serous fluid that can shift with gravity—the hallmark shifting fluid sign is absent. ## High-Yield Facts - **Shifting fluid sign** = mobile subretinal serous fluid that moves with gravity and head position changes; pathognomonic for exudative RD. - **Exudative RD** has NO retinal break; fluid accumulates from choroidal/systemic disease (diabetes, Harada, scleritis, hemangioma, metastases). - **Rhegmatogenous RD** has a retinal break; subretinal fluid is trapped and immobile (no shifting sign). - **Traction RD** is caused by fibroglial membrane contraction (PVR, advanced DR); fluid is fixed, not mobile. - **Retinal dialysis** is a circumferential retinal break at the equator (trauma); subretinal fluid is loculated, not gravitational. ## Mnemonics **ERD = Exudative = Easy to shift (gravity-dependent)** Exudative RD has **free serous fluid** (no break, no traction) → fluid moves with gravity → **shifting sign**. Rhegmatogenous and traction RD have **trapped/loculated fluid** → no shift. **SFS = Serous Fluid Shifts (ERD only)** **S**hifting **F**luid **S**ign = **E**xudative **R**D. Remember: if fluid moves with posture, it's exudative; if it's stuck, it's rhegmatogenous or traction. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair "shifting fluid" with rhegmatogenous RD to trap students who confuse fluid mobility with the presence of vitreous fluid seeping through a break. The key discriminator is that rhegmatogenous fluid is **trapped by the break and traction**, whereas exudative fluid is **free-flowing and gravitational**. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, exudative RD from diabetic macular edema or Harada disease is common. The shifting fluid sign on B-scan ultrasonography or optical coherence tomography (OCT) helps confirm ERD and guides treatment toward the underlying cause (tight glycemic control, immunosuppression for Harada) rather than vitreoretinal surgery—a critical distinction that changes management. _Reference: Parson's Diseases of the Eye (Ch. Retina: Retinal Detachment); Bailey & Love Surgery (Ophthalmology section)_
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