| Literature DB >> 27896784 |
Salma Gargouri1, Sana Khochtali2, Sourour Zina2, Molka Khairallah1, Imen Zone-Abid1, Imen Kaibi1, Salim Ben Yahia2, Jamel Feki1, Moncef Khairallah3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Varicella is a common infectious disease primarily of childhood that is usually benign and self-limited. It is, however, increasingly seen in adults who are at a higher risk of severe infection. Ocular complications of varicella are relatively uncommon and have been rarely described in adults. We describe herein five adults who developed ocular involvement in association with primary varicella-zoster virus infection.Entities:
Keywords: Acute retinal necrosis; Keratitis; Uveitis; Varicella
Year: 2016 PMID: 27896784 PMCID: PMC5126028 DOI: 10.1186/s12348-016-0117-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmic Inflamm Infect ISSN: 1869-5760
Clinical features, treatment modalities, and outcome in adults with chickenpox-associated ocular complications
| Case | Gender/age (years) | Past medical history | Time from skin eruption to ocular symptoms (weeks) | Affected eye | Initial visual acuity (VA) | Ocular findings | Treatment | Evolution | Follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case 1 | Male/39 | Kidney transplantation 5 years earlier | 3 | OU | 20/200 (RE) | Kerato-uveitis (RE) | Topical acyclovir | Resolution and then recurrence of uveitis with granulomatous precipitates, patchy iris atrophy and distorted pupil. | 24 |
| Case 2 | Male/42 | Unremarkable | 3 | LE | 20/20 (RE) | Acute anterior uveitis | Topical acyclovir | Resolution of uveitis | 24 |
| Case 3 | Male/33 | Unremarkable | 3 | LE | 20/20 (RE) | Acute anterior uveitis | Topical dexamethasone | Resolution of uveitis | 12 |
| Case 4 | Female/40 | Unremarkable | 1 | OU | Count fingers (RE) | Geographic keratitis | Intravenous acyclovir and oral steroid | Resolution/Recurrence of keratitis with peripheral corneal scars | 18 |
| Case 5 | Male/35 | Unremarkable | 3 | RE | 20/40 (RE) | Acute retinal necrosis | Intravenous acyclovir, intravitreal ganciclovir, and oral steroids | Resolution of inflammation | 18 |
Fig. 1Slit-lamp photography of case 1. a Slit-lamp photograph showing disciform keratitis. b Slit-lamp photograph showing large pigmented corneal precipitates. c Slit-lamp photograph showing a patchy iris atrophy and a distorted pupil
Fig. 2Slit-lamp photography of case 4. a Slit-lamp photograph showing a large geographic epithelial defect with stromal edema. b Slit-lamp photograph showing resolution of the corneal defect and corneal edema after treatment with antivirals and oral steroids