| Literature DB >> 31872314 |
Lagan Paul1, Manisha Agarwal2, Shalini Singh2, Prashant Katre2, Aman Sumeet Arora3.
Abstract
Scleritis is the severe painful inflammation of the sclera, which can be infectious or non-infectious. Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the common causes of infectious scleritis. TB, though endemic in countries like India, is rare in pediatric age group. We report a case of a 9-year-old female child who presented with bilateral non-necrotizing anterior scleritis with unilateral posterior scleritis secondary to TB. To our knowledge, this is a rare presentation in pediatric age group, and she is the youngest of few cases of tuberculous posterior scleritis reported in literature.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31872314 PMCID: PMC6928185 DOI: 10.1186/s12348-019-0192-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmic Inflamm Infect ISSN: 1869-5760
Fig. 1At presentation. a, b Anterior segment photo of both eyes showing acute nodular anterior scleritis (shown as arrow marks) with posterior synechiae in left eye. c Fundus photograph of right eye showing normal fundus. d Fundus photograph of left eye showing disc edema with retinal striae and tortous vessels. e, f OCT of both eyes. Normal in right eye whereas neurosensory detachment with thickening of inner retinal layers in left eye
Fig. 2B scan picture showing “T sign” along with increased thickness of sclerochoroidal complex (2.62 mm)
Fig. 3Follow-up 2 weeks. a Normal right eye fundus. c OCT of right eye. b Resolved disc edema and residual retinal striae. d OCT also shows decrease in retinal thickness, mild swelling of outer retinal layers with complete absorption of sub retinal fluid
Fig. 4Final follow-up at 15 months: normal fundus photograph of both eyes