| Literature DB >> 27424034 |
Anna Bajor1, Anke Luhr2, Dorothee Brockmann2, Sebastian Suerbaum3, Carsten Framme2, Ludwig Sedlacek3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The majority of cases of endophthalmitis are caused by exogenous pathogens; only 5-10 % are of endogenous origin. One cause of these rare cases of endogenous endophthalmitis is Listeria monocytogenes. Twenty-six cases of endophthalmitis due to this pathogen have been published over the last twenty years. The aim of this review is to summarize the main risk factors and common clinical findings of endogenous endophthalmitis due to Listeria monocytogenes. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Dark hypopyon; Endogenous; Endophthalmitis; Listeria monocytogenes; Uveitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27424034 PMCID: PMC4947317 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-1680-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Ultrasonography (B-scan), left eye, day 3. a First look at 8.00 am; vitreous with no evidence of infiltration, no retinal detachment. b Second look at 2.00 pm; vitreous appears condensed and infiltrated at the posterior hyaloid membrane compared to the first look of the day, no retinal detachment
Fig. 2Complicated cataract with elevated intraocular pressure. Slit lamp examination of the left eye showing a dense cataract with no visualization of the fundus (a). Three days after performing cataract surgery (b, c). Optical coherence tomography of the macula (d)
Onset of ocular symptoms
| Case | Age/Sex | IOP (in mmHg) | Ocular symptoms | Fibrin reaction | Keratic precipitates | Hypopyon | Initial diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 [ | 76 M | 43 | Red, uncomfortable, irritation, pain, poor vision | + | + | Acute anterior uveitis | |
| 2 [ | 62 M | 44 | Asymptomatic redness, decreased vision the following day | + | + | Anterior uveitis and corneal edema | |
| 3 [ | 69 M | 39 | Redness, pain | + | Acute iritis with secondary glaucoma | ||
| 4 [ | 68 M | 68 | Redness, photophobia, pain | + | + | + | Anterior uveitis and corneal edema |
| 5 [ | 68 F | 52 | Sudden onset of pain, decreased visual acuity | + | + | Necrotic ciliary body melanoma DD glaucomacyclitic crisis | |
| 6 [ | 57 F | 30 | Sudden onset of pain one week before | + | + | + | |
| 7 [ | 49 F | 46 | + | + | |||
| 8 [ | 63 M | 45 | Pain, photophobia, decreased vision | + | + | + | Acute anterior hypertensive uveitis |
| 9 [ | 50 F | 40 | + | + | |||
| 10 [ | 75 M | 32 | Pain, redness 2 days prior | + | + | + | |
| 11 [ | 52 M | 50 | Itching, redness and pain | + | |||
| 12 [ | 76 F | 44 | + | + | |||
| 13 [ | 47 F | 42 | Pain, 6 days prior | + | + | Anterior hypertensive uveitis | |
| 14 [ | 67 F | 42 | Pain, redness, decreased vision | ||||
| 15 [ | 55 M | 50 | Decreased vision and pain of the eye | + | + | + | |
| 16 [ | 73 M | 37 | Redness, pain, blurred vision since 2 days | + | + | + | Granulomatoes anterior uveitis |
| 17 [ | 51 F | 44 | Irritation, pain, decreased vision | + | + | ||
| 18 [ | 62 M | High | Pain, redness, decreased vision | Acute hypertensive uveitis | |||
| 19 [ | 24 F | 4 | + | Local panuveitis | |||
| 20 [ | 62 M | >50 | Decreased vision, redness and pain of the eye | + | |||
| 21 [ | 41 F | 44 | Redness of the eye, pain, headache | + | + | + | Uveitis anterior secondary glaucoma |
| 22 [ | 67 M | 35 | Pain, blurred vision increasing develeoped over 9 days | + | + | + | |
| 23 [present case] | 62 F | 48 | Pain, Redness, Blurred vision | + | + | Iritis with steril hypopyon | |
| 24 [ | 88 F | 47 | Acute blurred vision, increasing pain, redness | + | - | + | |
| 25 [ | 27 M | 18 | Redness, photophobia, decreased vision | + | Keratoconjunctivitis | ||
| 26 [ | 28 M | 50 | Redness, pain 5 days prior | + | Uveitis | ||
| 27 [ | 70 M | 26 | Declined vision | + | Panuveitis |
Overview of general findings in reviewed cases
| 27 patient in all | Data available | |
|---|---|---|
| Generall findings: | ||
| Age distribution | 24–88 | 27/27 |
| Gender | 15 M/12 F | 27/27 |
| Immuno compromised | 10 | 24/27 |
| Diabetes mellitus | 2 | 24/27 |
| History of cancer | 5 | 24/27 |
| Flu like symtoms | 7 | 15/27 |
| Initial therapy: | In total | |
| Only corticosteroide | 12 | 22/27 |
| Corticosteroids with additional antibiotics | 8 | |
| Diagnostic: | In total | |
| Direct Gram stain | 6 pos/9 neg | 15/27 |
| Aquous culture | 18 pos/3 neg | 21/27 |
| Intraocular culture | 7 pos/ 2 neg | 9/27 |
| Blood culture | 3 pos/10 neg | 13/27 |
| Final therapy: | In total | |
| Systemic (Intravenous, oral) | 24/2 | 26/27 |
| Ampicillin | 15 | |
| Gentamicin | 7 | |
| Penicilline | 6 | |
| Vancomycin | 3 | |
| Meropenem | 2 | |
| Erythromycin | 1 | |
| Tetracycline | 1 | |
| Ciprofloxacin | 1 | |
| Tobramycin | 1 | |
| Ceftazidime | 1 | |
| Clindamycin | 1 | |
| Combined | 12 | |
| Ocular additive | ||
| Paraocular (subconjunctival/-tenon/ intraorbital) | 5/1/1 | |
| Intraocular (intracameral/ -vitreal) | 2/8 | |
| Time between onset and treament | 4 to 32 days | 24/27 |
Fig. 3Visual acuity on admission and visual outcome. Visual acuity (VA) after stabilization of the ocular condition (visual outcome) was compared to VA at the time of admission to the hospital. For better graphical illustration, counting fingers (CF) and hand movements vision (HM) were converted into a decimal VA of 0.010 for CF and 0.0052 for HM according to the FrACT measures [42]. Since light perception could not be assigned to a specific decimal number, it was defined as 0 as well as no light perception. Case reports without description of either VA on admission or visual outcome were not considered [25, 34]