| Literature DB >> 26483675 |
Ahmad M Mansour1, Khalid F Tabbara2, Zuhair Tabbarah3.
Abstract
We present a healthy male subject who developed progressive visual loss in the left eye initially diagnosed as optic neuritis. Upon suspicion of infectious etiology, testing was positive for tuberculosis. There were no signs or symptoms of active systemic tuberculosis infection. The patient responded swiftly to antimycobacterial therapy with return of vision and resolution of disc swelling. Positive purified protein derivative skin test, negative chest radiograph, negative systemic workup, negative workup for other causes of unilateral optic neuritis and quick response to mycobacterial therapy reaffirm the entity of isolated optic disc tuberculosis similar to isolated choroidal tuberculosis without systemic manifestation.Entities:
Keywords: Immunocompetence; Ocular tuberculosis; Optic neuropathy; Systemic tuberculosis
Year: 2015 PMID: 26483675 PMCID: PMC4608621 DOI: 10.1159/000439376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Ophthalmol ISSN: 1663-2699
Fig. 1a Fundus photograph. Posterior pole of the left eye demonstrates marked swelling of the optic disc with peripapillary hemorrhage. b Fundus photograph. Posterior pole of the left eye 2 weeks after initiation of antimycobacterial therapy shows marked resolution of the optic disc swelling.
Fig. 2a Intravenous fluorescein angiography (6 min 21 s after dye injection). The left optic disc shows profuse leakage well at the venous phase transit. b Intravenous fluorescein angiography (8 min after dye injection). The left disc shows minimal leakage at the venous phase transit 2 weeks after initiation of therapy.
Fig. 3a OCT. Horizontal scan through the center of the left optic disc shows marked swelling of optic nerve head. b OCT. Horizontal scan through the center of the left optic disc 3 months after initiation of therapy. The left disc swelling has resolved.