| Literature DB >> 22614321 |
Ellen J Davis1, Sivakumar R Rathinam, Annabelle A Okada, Sharon L Tow, Harry Petrushkin, Elizabeth M Graham, Soon-Phaik Chee, Yan Guex-Crosier, Eva Jakob, Ilknur Tugal-Tutkun, Emmett T Cunningham, Jacqueline A Leavitt, Ahmad M Mansour, Kevin L Winthrop, William L Hills, Justine R Smith.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Tuberculous optic neuropathy may follow infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis or administration of the bacille Calmette-Guerin. However, this condition is not well described in the ophthalmic literature.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22614321 PMCID: PMC3500983 DOI: 10.1007/s12348-012-0079-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmic Inflamm Infect ISSN: 1869-5760
Characteristics of the study sample (n = 49 persons)
| Variable | Number of patients (%) or median (range) |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| •Male | 26 (53 %) |
| •Female | 23 (47 %) |
| Age (years) | 36 (13-76) |
| Laterality | |
| •Unilateral | 36 (73.5 %) |
| •Bilateral | 13 (26.5 %) |
| Presenting symptoms | |
| •Decreased vision | 42 (85.7 %) |
| •Pain (includes ocular pain, facial pain, headache) | 13 (26.5 %) |
| •Visual field loss | 3 (6.1 %) |
| •Ptosis | 3 (6.1 %) |
| •Color vision loss | 2 (4.1 %) |
| •Diplopia | 2 (4.1 %) |
| •Ocular injection | 2 (4.1 %) |
| •Floaters | 2 (4.1 %) |
| •Othera | 7 (14.3 %) |
| Race | |
| •Asian | 32 (65.3 %) |
| •White | 10 (20.4 %) |
| •Black | 7 (14.3 %) |
| Continents of residence or travel | |
| •North America | 8 (16.3) |
| •Europe | 14 (28.6) |
| •Africa | 8 (16.3) |
| •Asia | 44 (89.8) |
aOther: epiphora (n = 1), eyelid edema (n = 1), facial numbness (n = 1), nasal congestion (n = 1), photophobia (n = 1), photopsia (n = 1), transient visual obscuration (n = 1)
Optic nerve and other ocular involvements (n = 62 eyes)
| Number of eyes (%) | |
|---|---|
| Optic nerve involvementsa | |
| •Papillitis | 32 (51.6 %) |
| •Neuroretinitis | 9 (14.5 %) |
| •Optic nerve tubercle | 7 (11.3 %) |
| •Compressive optic neuropathy | 5 (8.1 %) |
| •Retrobulbar neuritis | 5 (8.1 %) |
| •Optic neuritis | 5 (8.1 %) |
| •Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy | 2 (3.2 %) |
| •Papilledema | 0 (0 %) |
| Other ocular involvementsa | |
| •Uveitis | 55 (88.7 %) |
| •Orbital apex syndrome | 8 (12.9 %) |
| •Posterior scleritis | 1 (1.6 %) |
| •Stromal keratitis | 1 (1.6 %) |
| •Central retinal vein occlusion | 1 (1.6 %) |
| Description of uveitis ( | |
| Location | |
| •Anterior | 1 (1.8 %) |
| •Intermediate | 3 (5.5 %) |
| •Posterior | 34 (61.8 %) |
| •Panuveitis | 17 (30.9 %) |
| Onset | |
| •Sudden | 29 (52.7 %) |
| •Insidious | 26 (47.3 %) |
| Duration | |
| •Limited | 22 (40.0 %) |
| •Persistent | 31 (56.4 %) |
| •Unspecified | 2 (3.6 %) |
| Course | |
| •Acute | 21 (38.2 %) |
| •Recurrent | 1 (1.8 %) |
| •Chronic | 29 (52.7 %) |
| •Unspecified | 4 (7.3 %) |
aMultiple optic nerve or other ocular involvements were observed in some patients
Diagnosis, systemic involvement and risk factors for tuberculosis (n = 49 persons)
| Variable | Number of patients (%) |
|---|---|
| Criteria used for diagnosis of tuberculosis | |
| •Consistent ocular signs | 49 (100 %) |
| •Positive response to antituberculous treatment | 44 (89.8 %) |
| •Positive Mantoux reaction | 38 (77.6 %) |
| •Positive IFN-gamma release assay | 10 (20.4 %) |
| •Active or old lesion(s) consistent with pulmonary tuberculosis on chest imaging | 4 (8.2 %) |
| •Identification of acid-fast bacilli by microscopy or culture | |
| •Extraocular | 3 (6.1 %) |
| •Intraocular | 0 (0 %) |
| •Positive | 0 (0 %) |
| Systemic involvements | |
| •Pulmonary | 8 (16.3 %) |
| •Central nervous system: meningeal | 4 (8.2 %) |
| •Lymphatic | 4 (8.2 %) |
| •Othera | 2 (4.1 %) |
| •None | 31 (63.3 %) |
| Risk factors | |
| •Lived in or travel to an endemic area | 34 (69.4 %) |
| •Personal or family history of tuberculosis | 9 (18.4 %) |
| •Diabetes mellitus | 5 (10.2 %) |
| •Health care worker | 1 (2.1 %) |
| •Malignancy | 1 (2.1 %) |
aOther systemic involvements: bone (n = 1); renal (n = 1)
Treatment regimens (n = 49 patients)
| Treatment | Number of patients (%) |
|---|---|
| Antibiotic alone | 18 (36.7 %) |
| Corticosteroid alone | 0 (0 %) |
| Antibiotic + corticosteroid | 29 (59.2 %) |
| Nonea | 2 (4.1 %) |
| Antibiotic | |
| •Four-drug regimenb | 29 (59.2 %) |
| •Other antituberculosis treatment | 18 (36.7 %) |
| Corticosteroid | |
| •Oral | 28 (57.1 %) |
| •Intravenous | 1 (2.0 %) |
| •Local | 2 (4.1 %) |
aNone: lost to follow-up (n = 1); refused antituberculous treatment (n = 1)
bFour-drug regimen: isoniazid + rifampicin + pyrazinamide + ethambutol
Snellen visual acuity and complications (n = 62 eyes)
| Number of eyes (%) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Snellen visual acuity | ||
| Initial ( | Final ( | |
| >20/50 | 23 (37.1 %) | 46 (76.7 %) |
| ≤20/50 | 39 (62.9 %) | 14 (23.3 %) |
| ≤ 20/200 | 24 (38.7 %) | 6 (10.0 %) |
| Complications | ||
| Visual field defects | 29 (46.8 %) | |
| Defects ( | ||
| •Enlarged blind spot | 8 (27.6 %) | |
| •Central scotoma | 4 (13.8 %) | |
| •Altitudinal defect | 2 (6.9 %) | |
| •Peripheral defect | 2 (6.9 %) | |
| •Enlarged blind spot + paracentral scotoma | 2 (6.9 %) | |
| •Central scotoma + peripheral defect | 2 (6.9 %) | |
| •Othera | 6 (20.7 %) | |
| •Not specified | 3 (10.3 %) | |
| Recovery ( | ||
| •Full | 6 (20.7 %) | |
| •Partial | 6 (20.7 %) | |
| •No | 7 (24.1 %) | |
| •Not specified | 10 (34.5 %) | |
| Optic atrophy | 13 (21.0 %) | |
aOther: enlarged blind spot + central scotoma (n = 1), cecocentral scotoma + peripheral defect (n = 1), paracentral scotoma (n = 1), altitudinal defect + peripheral defect (n = 1), quadrantanopia (n = 1), 3-quadrantanopia (n = 1)