Drusen are changes seen with age and are described as focal collection of acellular, polymorphous debris seen beneath the retinal pigment epithelium and within Bruch’s membrane. These are visualized on funduscope as pale yellow deposits on the macula and peripheral retina (1).
They are divided according to the size as
drusen can also be classified into two main subgroups, either hard or soft
Drusen formation increases with age and are associated with AMD, which is the leading cause of irreversible visual loss in the elderly population in the Western world.
One or two small hard drusen (<63 mm in diameter) in the macula (of any eye) is seen in around 90% of white people aged ≥40 years. Progression to advanced AMD in these patients is almost insignificant (2).
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