| Literature DB >> 30541489 |
Anas Mohammad Albarrak1, Yousef Mohammad2, Sajjad Hussain3, Sufia Husain4, Taim Muayqil5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This report highlights a rare case of simultaneous bilateral blindness due to posterior ischemic optic neuropathy. Typically, ophthalmic involvement in giant cell arteritis is monocular or sequential ischemia of the anterior portion of the optic nerve, and less frequently simultaneous. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Blindness; Giant cell arteritis; Headache; Neuro-ophthalmology; Posterior ischemic optic neuropathy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30541489 PMCID: PMC6292061 DOI: 10.1186/s12886-018-0994-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
Fig. 1a Axial diffusion weighted images. b ADC maps, c high resolution T2 weighted images and d coronal T2 weighted images. Arrows showing true diffusion restriction in the right optic nerve with T2 signal hyperintensity
Fig. 2MRA of the patient (a) versus a normal individual (b) with arrows indicating severe narrowing in ophthalmic arteries in the patient bilaterally
Fig. 3Photomicrograph of a cross section of temporal artery shows (a) almost total occlusion of the vascular lumen (arrow) due to fibrointimal proliferation and arteritis (Hematoxylin and eosin stain; original magnification × 100.). b Infiltration of the arterial intima and media by patchy moderately dense lymphohistiocytic inflammatory cells (arrows). The arterial lumen is reduced to a narrow slit-like channel (arrowhead)(Hematoxylin and eosin stain; original magnification × 200.) c High magnification shows mononuclear inflammatory cell infiltrate mixed with scattered multinucleated giant cells (arrowhead) in the vessel wall. Fragmentation of the internal elastic lamina (arrow) and fibrointimal proliferation and edema (curved arrow) of the arterial intima is also shown (Hematoxylin and eosin stain; original magnification × 400.) d High magnification shows a lymphohistiocytic inflammatory cell infiltrate (arrowhead) destroying and disrupting the internal elastic lamina (arrow). (Hematoxylin and eosin stain; original magnification × 400.) Inset: shows elastic tissue stain highlighting the fragmented internal elastic lamina (arrowhead). (Elastic Van Gieson stain; original magnification × 400
Reports of posterior ischemic optic neuropathy secondary to giant cell arteritis
| Number of patients | Number of cases | Clinical details | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liozon et al. 2001[ | 174 GCA | 2 (PION) | Both described as bilateral and recovered |
| Hayreh et al. 1998 [ | 170 Biopsy proven GCA | 6 (PION) | One described as Bilateral |
| Garrity et al. 2017 [ | 32 Biopsy proven ophthalmic GCA | 2 (PION) | African American cohort |
| Danesh-Meyer et al. 2005 [ | 34 Biopsy proven ophthalmic GCA | 2 (PION) | One had PION on one side and AION on the other side that was described as bilateral at presentation |
| Liu et al. 1994 [ | 45 biopsy proven ophthalmic GCA | 2 (PION) | One had PION on one side and AION on the other side that was simultaneous onset |
| Aiello et al. 1993 [ | 327 GCA | 1 (PION) | |
| Chaudhry et al. 2007 [ | 102 Suspected ophthalmic GCA | 1 (PION) | |
| Sadda et al. 2001[ | 72 PION patients | 6 (Arteritic) | None simultaneous due to arteritis |
| Hayreh 2004 [ | 43 PION patients | 12 (Arteritic) |