| Literature DB >> 26438050 |
Joanna Przeździecka-Dołyk1, Agnieszka Węgrzyn2, Anna Turno-Kręcicka3, Marta Misiuk-Hojło3.
Abstract
Pars planitis is defined as an intermediate uveitis of unknown background of systemic disease with characteristic formations such as vitreous snowballs, snowbanks and changes in peripheral retina. The incidence of pars planitis varies 2.4-15.4 % of the uveitis patients. The pathogenesis of the disease is to be determined in future. Clinical and histopathological findings suggest an autoimmune etiology, most likely as a reaction to endogenous antigen of unknown source, with T cells predominant in both vitreous and pars plana infiltrations. T cells subsets play an important role as a memory-effector peripheral cell. Snowbanks are formed as an effect of post inflammatory glial proliferation of fibrous astrocytes. There is also a genetic predisposition for pars planitis by human leukocyte antigen and several other genes. A coexistence of multiple sclerosis and optic neuritis has been described in numerous studies. Epiretinal membrane, cataract, cystoid macular edema, retinal detachment, retinal vasculitis, neovascularization, vitreous peripheral traction, peripheral hole formation, vitreous hemorrhage, disc edema are common complications observed in pars planitis. There is a need to expand the knowledge of the pathogenic and immunologic background of the pars planitis to create an accurate pharmacological treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Ciliary body; Eye; Idiopathic uveitis intermedialis; Immunology; Iris; Pars planitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26438050 PMCID: PMC4805694 DOI: 10.1007/s00005-015-0361-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Immunol Ther Exp (Warsz) ISSN: 0004-069X Impact factor: 4.291
Experimental models of uveitis—summary
| Experimental model | Antigen | Target | Immunological response | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cellular | Humoral | ||||
| Experimental autoimmune uveitis | S-antigen/S-arrestin/S–Ag | Photoreceptors | T cell-mediated inflammatory response present, mainly CD4+ cells | IL-2, IFN-γ and TNF-α are produced by the subset Th1 | Adamus and Chan ( |
| Experimental melanin protein-induced uveitis | Melanin protein | Uveal melanocytes | CD4+ T cells and macrophages—the primary mediators of the inflammatory response | Early stages—IL-2 and IFN-γ | Adamus and Chan ( |
| Experimental autoimmune encephalitis associated to anterior uveitis | Mielin binding protein | Iris myelinated nerves and spinal cord | Th1 cells | IL-2 and IFN-γ are produced by the subset Th1 | Adamus et al. ( |
| Endotoxin-induced uveitis | Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) | Intense acute inflammatory cellular infiltration of neutrophils and macrophages | Released cytokines: TNF-α, IFN-γ, TGF-β, IL-1, IL-6, IL-8, CCL2 and CCL5 | Adamus and Chan ( | |
Immunopathogenesis of pars planitis/idiopathic intermediate uveitis—summary (included manuscripts in which the study group or its subdivided subgroup in the description given by the authors can be considered as pars planitis)
| References | Number of patients | Findings | Materials | Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Murphy et al. ( | Idiopathic intermediate uveitis = 18 | The expression of the CD69 and TNF-α by peripheral blood CD4+ lymphocytes of patients with idiopathic intermediate uveitis was significantly higher than control subjects ( | PB lymphocytes; 14 of the patients were on systemic immunosuppressive therapy, 4 were on topical steroids and 6 were without treatmenta | CD4+ T cell expression of CD69, CCR4, CCR5, CXCR3 and the intracellular cytokines IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-10 by flow cytometry |
| Klok et al. ( | Idiopathic intermediate uveitis = 61 | Increased serum IL-8 was found in patients with idiopathic intermediate uveitis ( | PB samples | Serum levels of CRP were assessed using an immunodiffusion assay and the IL-8 was measured with ELISA |
| Klok et al. ( | Idiopathic intermediate uveitis = 61 | Increased serum levels of sICAM-1 were found in idiopathic intermediate uveitis compared with toxoplasmosis, Fuchs’ cyclitis, and healthy controls ( | PB samples | Serum levels of sICAM-1 were detected using a commercially available ELISA |
| Deschênes et al. ( | Uveitis = 51 (AqH or VB or/and PB) | The diagnosis of pars planitis was indicated in the study but no statistical analysis was made for that subgroup | AqH, VB and PB samples | Two colors cytometric analyses of cell population were performed |
| Pedroza-Seres et al. ( | Pars planitis = 15 | CD57+ T cells subsets were increased in patients with pars planitis ( | PB lymphocytes | The CD57+ T cell subsets CCR7, CD27, CD28, CD45RA, CD45RO, intracellular IFN-γ, IL-4, perforin and granzyme-A expression were assessed by flow cytometry |
AqH aqueous humor, PB peripheral blood, VB vitreal body, sICAM-1 soluble intracellular adhesion molecule 1
Researchers do not specify uveitic groups
Distribution of HLA alleles in pars planitis with association to clinical features (family reports were excluded)
| References | Number of patients | Findings | The origin of the patients | Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alaez et al. ( | Study group = 79 (pars planitis) | Nonsymmetrical onset: | Mexican | HLA-A, -B, and -C typing on T cells isolated with immunomagnetic beads |
| Malinowski et al. ( | Study group = 40 (pars planitis) | In study vs control group HLA-B8 ( | HLA analysis of class I and II phenotypes | |
| Oruc et al. ( | Study group = 28 (pars planitis) | In patients with pars planitis vs control group HLA-DR15 ( | HLA-DR genotyping | |
| Raja et al. ( | Study group = 32 (pars planitis) | HLA-DR15 was associated with pars planitis ( | Predominantly white (one Hispanic and one Asian patient) | HLA-DR genotyping |
| Mantrana-Bermejo et al. ( | Study group = 24 (pars planitis) | No association between the occurrence of pars planitis and HLA DR 15 or other known HLA genotypes | Spanish | HLA-A, -B and -DR genotyping |
| Greiner et al. ( | Study group = 15 (pars planitis*) | No association between the occurrence of pars planitis and the HLA DR15 or other known HLA DR genotypes | Scottish | HLA-DR genotyping for all DRB genes using PCR sequence-specific primers |
No study group nor control group patients were related in included researches
OR odds ratio
* Only patients with bilateral vitritis and snowbanks in at least one eye was included
** An exclusion has been made of five patients with pars planitis in whom multiple sclerosis were developed—this exclusion did not change the significance of above findings
Fig. 116-year-old feme patient with diagnosed pars planitis, first ophthalmological examination. Snowballs are seen as focal yellow–white massive exudates in peripheral anterior vitreous
Fig. 2Massive exudates in mid vitreous that block fundoscopic examination of posterior pole
Fig. 317-year-old female patient with diagnosed multiple sclerosis, first ophthalmological examination. Vascular sheaths also known as vascular cuffs are seen as massive perivascular exudates
Fig. 4Late phase of fluorescein angiography showing cystoid macular edema in 11-year-old boy with pars planitis