AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examines the clinical and imaging characteristics of sympathetic ophthalmia, a condition that affects the eye after trauma, by comparing acute and chronic phases of the disease.
  • Ten patients with previous eye injuries were analyzed, revealing that acute symptoms often included various forms of uveitis, while chronic symptoms showed significant atrophy and fibrosis in the eye.
  • The findings suggest that different imaging features can help diagnose sympathetic ophthalmia at different stages, particularly in patients with a history of eye trauma and certain visual symptoms.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To report the clinical and multimodal imaging features of sympathetic ophthalmia in the acute and chronic phases.

Methods: Retrospective cohort study of consecutive patients with sympathetic ophthalmia seen at a tertiary referral center. Charts, imaging studies, and histopathological specimens were reviewed. The clinical features and multimodal imaging in the sympathizing eye were analyzed by sorting features into those seen in the acute and chronic phase.

Results: Ten patients were included in the analysis and all of them had previous ocular trauma or complicated retinal detachment. In the acute phase, 70% had anterior uveitis, 70% had vitritis, and 100% had active posterior uveitis; posterior uveitis included multifocal choroiditis (80%), optic disc swelling (40%), multiple serous retinal detachments (20%), MEWDS-like findings (10%), and retinal vasculitis with chorioretinitis (10%). In the chronic phase, posterior manifestations included widespread patches of chorioretinal atrophy in the mid- and far-periphery (80%), peripapillary subretinal fibrosis (50%), and nummular perivascular atrophy (50%).

Conclusions: Sympathetic ophthalmia shows different posterior segment manifestations in the acute and chronic phase. Active sympathetic ophthalmia should be ruled out in eyes with a MEWDS-like presentation or rapidly progressing chorioretinitis, and history of trauma in the fellow eye. Peripapillary subretinal fibrosis and perivascular nummular atrophy may be useful features to suspect SO once acute inflammation has resolved.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09273948.2023.2245048DOI Listing

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