Timing of prophylactic and early vitrectomy for first-presenting or recurrent acute retinal necrosis syndrome.

Acta Med Okayama

Department of Ophthalmology, Okayama University Medical School and Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama 700-8558, Japan.

Published: June 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute Retinal Necrosis Syndrome (ARNS) is a serious eye disease caused by herpes that complicates decisions about when to perform surgery.
  • Two patients were treated with early vitrectomy, leading to positive visual results: one man had recurring ARNS and had surgery during the initial inflammation phase, while a woman had surgery afterward due to complications caused by the disease.
  • The report suggests early vitrectomy is helpful during acute inflammation for existing issues, while surgery in the post-inflammatory phase benefits patients with new complications.

Article Abstract

Acute retinal necrosis syndrome (ARNS) is a herpetic infectious eye disease that presents clinicians with difficult decisions to make about the indication and timing of surgical intervention. Here I report 2 patients who underwent prophylactic and early vitrectomy with good visual outcomes. Case 1, a 72-year-old man, had a second recurrence of ARNS in the left eye in 2011 and underwent early vitrectomy in the acute inflammatory phase to remove previously formed vitreous opacity and vitreoretinal adhesions, in parallel with intravenous acyclovir and oral prednisolone administration. He had experienced ARNS in the right eye in 1983, in the left eye in 1986, and a recurrence in the left eye in 1999. Case 2, a 66-year-old woman, developed ARNS in the right eye. All of the circumferential retinal lesions became degenerative with intravenous acyclovir and prednisolone. She underwent a vitrectomy in the post-inflammatory phase, since epiretinal proliferation was noted through vitreous opacity with complete posterior vitreous detachment. These cases suggest that early vitrectomy in the acute inflammatory phase would be indicated for pre-existing vitreoretinal adhesions, while prophylactic vitrectomy in the post-inflammatory phase would be indicated for epiretinal proliferation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.18926/AMO/49046DOI Listing

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