Bilateral acute depigmentation of the iris and bilateral acute iris transillumination (BAIT) are similar clinical entities. The former causes acute-onset depigmentation of the iris stroma without transillumination, whereas the latter causes depigmentation of the iris pigment epithelium with transillumination. The etiopathogenesis of these conditions is not yet fully understood, but the proposed causes include the use of systemic antibiotics (especially moxifloxacin) and viral triggers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The goal of this study is to describe the clinical and laboratory outcomes of patients with syphilitic uveitis treated with 2 g intravenous Ceftriaxone daily on an outpatient treatment basis for 14 days, in the setting of the COVID pandemic and lack of hospitalization availability.
Methods: This study included a review of the clinical records from patients from January 2020 to December 2021 and who were then followed for 6 months at the Research Laboratory of Infectious Diseases in Ophthalmology of the National Institute of Infectious Diseases Evandro Chagas (INI) FIOCRUZ, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Conclusion: This study showed that almost all of the 15 patients were well treated for ocular syphilis with Ceftriaxone without any signs of therapeutic failure with documented clinical improvement and satisfactory decreasing VDRL titers.