Cases reported "Retinitis"

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1/19. Progression of cytomegalovirus retinitis in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: a case report.

    We report an AIDS patient with cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis that developed from an early minor lesion and progressed to extended involvement of the retina and severe deterioration of vision due to poor compliance with ganciclovir treatment. A 33-year-old man was known to have acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) for eight months. The patient had no complaint of visual symptoms. A routine eye examination revealed his visual acuity to be 6/6 in both eyes. The dilated eye fundus examination using indirect ophthalmoscopy disclosed a localized white yellowish granular lesion in the peripheral retina of the right eye and a completely normal left eye. CMV retinitis with initial manifestation in the right eye was diagnosed. Due to incomplete treatment with ganciclovir, the retinal lesion rapidly enlarged and extended to the posterior pole, with eventual destruction of the nerve fiber layer and optic disc. The visual acuity of right eye dropped from 6/6 to 1/60 within six months. This case report indicates the importance of early, dilated eye fundus examination and recognition of early CMV retinitis in order to salvage visual function in AIDS patients. Completion of the anti-CMV treatment course in halting the progression of CMV retinitis is also emphasized.
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2/19. bk virus as the cause of meningoencephalitis, retinitis and nephritis in a patient with AIDS.

    BACKGROUND: The two widely spread human polyomaviruses, bk virus (BKV) and jc virus (JCV) establish latency in the urinary tract, and can be reactivated in AIDS. JCV might cause progressive multifocal leucoencephalopathy, but although up to 60% of AIDS patients excrete BKV in the urine there have been few reports of BKV-related renal and/or neurological disease in AIDS. OBJECTIVE: To report on an AIDS patient with progressive renal and neurological symptoms involving the retina. DESIGN: Case report. SETTING: Venhalsan, Soder Hospital, Stockholm, sweden. methods: The brain, eye tissue, cerebrospinal fluid, urine and peripheral blood mononuclear cells were analysed by nested PCR for polyoma-virus dna. Macroscopical and microscopical examination were performed of the kidney and brain post mortem. Immunohistochemical stainings for the two BKV proteins, the VP1 and the agnoprotein, were performed on autopsy material and virus infected tissue culture cells. RESULTS: BKV could be demonstrated in the brain, cerebrospinal fluid, eye tissues, kidneys and peripheral blood mononuclear cells. CONCLUSION: During 6 years, approximately 400 cerebrospinal fluid samples from immunosuppressed individuals with neurological symptoms have been investigated by PCR for the presence of polyomaviruses. BKV dna has, so far, only been found in the case reported here. Although reports of BKV infections in the nervous system are rare, there is now evidence for its occurrence in immunocompromised patients and the diagnosis should be considered in such patients with neurological symptoms and signs of renal disease. The diagnosis is simple to verify and is important to establish.
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3/19. Diffuse bilateral subacute neuroretinitis: first patient with documented nematodes in both eyes.

    OBJECTIVE: To describe the first patient with documented evidence of diffuse unilateral subacute neuroretinitis (DUSN) in both eyes. methods: A 10-year-old healthy Brazilian girl was first seen with signs of late-stage DUSN in both eyes. A careful search for a nematode was performed in each eye. RESULTS: A motile 550- to 660-microm nematode was found in the inferotemporal retina of the left eye. A similar-sized motile nematode was found in the superotemporal retina of the right eye. Both nematodes were treated with argon green laser applications with bilateral improvement of visual function. CONCLUSION: Although most patients with DUSN do not develop the disease in the fellow eye, this case demonstrates that DUSN can occasionally affect both eyes.
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4/19. Extensive dynamics in location, shape, and size of aneurysms in a patient with idiopathic retinal vasculitis, aneurysms, and neuroretinitis (IRVAN) syndrome. Idiopathic retinal vasculitis, aneurysms, and neuroretinitis.

    PURPOSE: To describe an unusual case of idiopathic retinal vasculitis, aneurysms, and neuroretinitis (IRVAN) syndrome with rapid dynamics in the number and appearance of the aneurysms. DESIGN: Observational case report. methods: Clinical and angiographic data of the patient were reviewed. RESULTS: In the course of only 6 months, preexisting retinal aneurysms resolved while new ones appeared. Changes were observed in the shape and size of preexisting lesions. The resolution of lesions in eyes previously untreated by laser is reported for the first time. CONCLUSIONS: Vascular lesions in IRVAN syndrome may show an unusually rapid turnover. The resolution of aneurysms is a part of the natural course of the disease and may occur without previous retinal laser photocoagulation.
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5/19. Concurrent uveoretinitis and pineocytoma in a child suggests a causal relationship.

    Uveoretinitis was observed in a 9-year-old girl 6 months prior to the clinical appearance of a pineal tumour. Surgical removal was not successful but biopsy revealed a parenchymal neoplasm with differentiated pinealocytes and absent mitotic activity. Some of the tumour cells contained S-antigen, rhodopsin, and serotonin. Systemic glucocorticoid therapy followed by radiation therapy caused considerable reduction in size of the tumour and a complete normalisation of all eye symptoms. This report demonstrates for the first time that a pineocytoma can occur together with uveoretinitis in humans. The latter resembles the experimentally induced autoimmune uveoretinitis described in animals. It is speculated that the retinitis might reflect an autoimmune response to S-antigen present in some tumour cells of the pineocytoma.
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6/19. Diffuse unilateral subacute neuroretinitis in south america.

    We describe two cases of diffuse unilateral subacute neuroretinitis in south america. These Brazilian patients presented with subretinal worms similar in size to those described in the southeastern united states. This is the first report, to our knowledge, of diffuse unilateral subacute neuroretinitis occurring outside the United States and Caribbean islands.
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7/19. Syphilis presenting as scleritis in an hiv-positive man undergoing immune reconstitution.

    A 45-year-old hiv-positive man receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) presented with 6 weeks of right-sided headache and right eye pain. He had been diagnosed seropositive 2 years previously and screened negative for syphilis at that time. Examination demonstrated focal anterior scleritis with underlying retinitis and a mild vitritis. He was found to have positive syphilis serology and further investigations were consistent with neurosyphilis. Parenteral penicillin was commenced with prompt clinical response. This initial presentation of syphilis as acute scleritis emphasizes the need for thorough work-up of immunocompromised patients with inflammatory ocular disease.
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8/19. Varicella-zoster virus retinitis in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.

    We examined five patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus who developed a rapidly progressive necrotizing retinitis characterized by early patchy choroidal and deep retinal lesions and late diffuse thickening of the retina. In all but one case, the retinitis began in the posterior pole with little or no clinical evidence of vasculitis. All five patients had relentless progression of disease and were left with atrophic and necrotic retinae, pale optic-nerve heads, and narrowed vasculature. None of the patients developed aqueous or vitreal inflammation or retinal detachment. Clinical and laboratory evidence suggested that varicella-zoster virus was the causal agent in all five cases. First, the onset of retinitis in four cases either succeeded or was coincident with an eruption of dermatomal zoster. Second, varicella-zoster virus was cultured from the two chorioretinal specimens and varicella-zoster virus antigen was detected in the vitreal aspirate from one case. Third, by means of immunocytochemistry, varicella-zoster virus antigen was found in the outer retinae of both enucleation specimens. Fourth, viral capsids with the size and shape of herpesviridae were found in the outer retinae of both enucleation specimens. The clinical features observed in this study are distinct from those described for the acute retinal necrosis syndrome and appear to constitute a new and highly characteristic pattern of varicella-zoster virus-induced disease.
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9/19. Diffuse unilateral subacute neuroretinitis with unusual findings.

    PURPOSE: To report two cases of diffuse unilateral subacute neuroretinitis (DUSN) with unusual findings. DESIGN: Observational and interventional case series. methods: Two patients with DUSN were found to have the unusual findings of a large live worm in one eye and macular cyst in the other. Both patients underwent fundus fluorescein angiography and optical coherence tomography. RESULTS: Photocoagulation to the worm was performed in one patient; the other received a course of oral albendazole. Both remained stable over six months of follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: We report a case of DUSN due to a worm, the large size of which suggests it to be different from the usual reported causative agents. We also report macular cyst as an associated finding in DUSN.
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10/19. pharmacokinetics of ganciclovir in a patient undergoing hemodialysis.

    The pharmacokinetics and effect of hemodialysis on the clearance of ganciclovir were evaluated in a patient with cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis and pneumonitis requiring dialytic support. A dose of 300 mg ganciclovir (5 mg/kg) was administered by intravenous infusion over a 60-minute period. blood samples were obtained over the next 10 hours and used to assess plasma ganciclovir concentrations. The patient underwent hemodialysis the following day during which paired arterial and venous blood samples were obtained to determine dialyzer clearance of this antiviral agent. High-performance liquid chromatography was used to quantify ganciclovir plasma concentrations. ganciclovir levels declined in a monoexponential manner following infusion and prior to dialysis. The patient's peak ganciclovir concentration was markedly elevated (20 micrograms/mL) compared with previously reported peak concentrations in patients with normal renal function. Similarly, the elimination half-life (t1/2) was increased (6.3 hours) in this patient compared with values reported in patients with normal renal function. The volume of distribution (0.21 L/kg) and total body clearance prior to hemodialysis (35.5 mL/min) were diminished in this patient. Hemodialysis reduced ganciclovir levels by approximately 62% with an extraction coefficient of 0.29 resulting in a dialyzer clearance of 48.3 mL/min. This supports supplementation of ganciclovir in patients receiving this antiviral agent when they are undergoing hemodialysis. Additionally, close monitoring of ganciclovir concentrations in patients with abnormal renal function is necessary in order to make appropriate dosage adjustments.
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