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nonneovascular

Nonneovascular is a medical term used to describe tissues, lesions, or pathological processes that lack neovascularization, i.e., the formation of new blood vessels. The word combines non- with neovascular, and it is used across several specialties to distinguish conditions that do not involve angiogenesis from those that do.

In ophthalmology, nonneovascular age-related macular degeneration, often referred to as dry AMD, is characterized by the

Outside the eye, nonneovascular describes tissues or lesions that do not induce new blood vessel formation.

The term is primarily descriptive and should be interpreted within its specific clinical context. It is important

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presence
of
drusen
and
atrophy
of
the
retinal
pigment
epithelium
without
choroidal
neovascularization.
This
form
contrasts
with
neovascular
(wet)
AMD,
which
involves
abnormal
growth
of
new
blood
vessels
beneath
the
retina
and
can
lead
to
fluid
leakage,
hemorrhage,
and
faster
vision
loss.
Diagnosis
typically
relies
on
imaging
methods
such
as
optical
coherence
tomography
and
fluorescein
angiography
to
determine
whether
CNV
is
present.
This
descriptor
can
have
implications
for
prognosis
and
treatment,
since
angiogenesis
is
a
common
target
in
therapies
for
cancer
and
other
diseases.
In
this
broader
sense,
nonneovascular
conditions
are
identified
by
the
absence
of
angiogenic
activity
rather
than
by
a
single
uniform
disease
entity.
to
distinguish
nonneovascular
from
neovascular
or
angiogenic
processes,
as
these
differences
influence
diagnostic
approaches
and
management
strategies.