| Literature DB >> 34055261 |
Amirhossein Roshanshad1,2, Mohammad Ali Ashraf1,2, Romina Roshanshad1,2, Ali Kharmandar3,4, Seyed Alireza Zomorodian1, Hossein Ashraf2.
Abstract
Apart from conjunctival involvement which is the most well-known ocular manifestation of coronavirus infectious disease 2019 (COVID-19), there are multiple reports of the involvement of other ocular structures by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). We comprehensively reviewed PubMed, Scopus, Embase, and Google Scholar for available evidence regarding COVID-19 various ocular manifestations, with special focus on less known and unusual ocular findings. We then categorized the findings based on the parts of the eye which was involved. In anterior sections of the eye, the involvement of the eyelid (tarsadenitis), conjunctiva and cornea (follicular conjunctivitis, pseudomembranous conjunctivitis, and keratoconjunctivitis), episclera (nodular episcleritis), uvea (anterior uveitis) were reported. Also, third, fourth, and sixth nerve palsy, retinal vasculitis, retinal optical coherence tomography (OCT) changes (hyper-reflective lesions and increased retinal nerve fiber layer thickness [RNFLT]), optic neuritis, papillophlebitis, Miller Fisher syndrome, posterior reversible leukoencephalopathy (PRES), ophthalmic artery and central retinal artery occlusion, and polyneuritis cranialis were reported in different studies. Postmortem evaluation of COVID-19 patients detected no viral RNA in different anterior and posterior segments of the eyes. However, another study revealed a 21.4% positivity of the retinal biopsies of dead patients. The results of this study can help ophthalmologists to be vigilant when they see these findings in a suspected case of COVID-19. In addition, wearing face masks and protective goggles or eye shields are recommended, especially in high risk contacts.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Manifestations; Ocular; Ophthalmologic; Coronavirus
Year: 2021 PMID: 34055261 PMCID: PMC8126735 DOI: 10.18502/jovr.v16i2.9087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmic Vis Res ISSN: 2008-322X
Characteristics and main findings of the included studies (eyelid, ocular surface, episcleral, uveal, and ocular motor nerve findings)
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| Xu[ | April 2020 | 1 | Medium | Pain in the lateral canthus and lower eyelid swelling | The same as symptoms | Tarsadenitis |
| Megarbane | May 2020 | 3 | High | Red eye, painless eyelid swelling, and tearing in three cases | Single non-tender inflammatory nodules in the middle of the lower eyelid, conjunctival redness without altered visual acuity or corneal abrasion | Chalazion |
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| Bostanci Ceran[ | June 2020 | 93 | Low | 21% of the patients had ocular problems. Photophobia (16.1%), itchiness (15.7%), burning sensation (8.4%), gritty feeling (6%), blurred vision (4.8%) | Hyperemia (21.5%), epiphora (9.7%), increased secretion (6.5%) | Chemosis (3.2%), follicular conjunctivitis (8.6) |
| WHO[ | February 2020 | 55,924 | N/A | 0.8% of the patients had conjunctival congestion | ||
| Loffredo[ | April 2020 | 1,167 | Medium | Overall rate of conjunctivitis was 1.1%; 0.7% in non-severe cases and 3% in severe cases | ||
| Chen[ | May 2020 | 535 | High | Increased conjunctival secretion (9.7%), ocular pain (4.3%), photophobia (3%), dry eye (21%) and tearing (10.3%) | 5% had conjunctival congestion, 15% of whom as the initial finding. Other findings were: conjunctivitis (6.2%), xerophthalmia (4.5%), and keratitis (2.6%) | |
| Navel[ | May 2020 | 1 | Low | Follicles, petechias, tarsal hemorrhages, and chemosis | Mucous filaments and tarsal pseudomembranous | Pseudomembranous conjunctivitis |
| Cheema[ | April 2020 | 1 | Low | Red eye, watery discharge, photophobia | Conjunctival injection, follicles, pseudodendrite in the cornea, and subepithelial infiltrates with overlying epithelial defects at the limbus | Keratoconjunctivitis |
| Wu[ | 38 | High | 31.6% had ocular manifestations consistent with conjunctivitis including hyperemia (7.9%), chemosis (21%), epiphora (18.4%), or increased secretions (18.4%) | |||
| Sarma[ | April 2020 | 854 | Low | 3.2% had conjunctivitis/red eye, 0.7% reported conjunctivitis as the first symptom of the disease. 2% positive conjunctival/tear PCR samples | ||
| Chen[ | April 2020 | 1 | Low | Positivity of conjunctival swab specimens till 19 days after the disease onset | Conjunctivitis | |
| Colavita[ | August 2020 | 1 | Medium | Higher viral load in late ocular samples than nasal swabs | Positivity of ocular samples till 21 days after the disease onset | Conjunctivitis |
| Aiello[ | May 2020 | 252 | Medium | 12/204 (5.8%) had positive PCR of conjunctival swab | ||
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| Mendez Mangana[ | June 2020 | 1 | Low | Red eye, foreign-body sensation, epiphora, and photophobia | Elevated epibulbar area with hyperemia at the inferotemporal sector without fluorescein defect | Nodular episcleritis |
| Bostanci Ceran[ | June 2020 | 93 | Low | 2.2% of the patients had episcleritis | Episcleritis | |
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| Bettach[ | June 2020 | 1 | Low | Bilateral blurry vision | Conjunctival hyperemia, central corneal edema with Descemet's membrane folds, multiple keratic precipitates, and +1 anterior chamber cells and flare | Anterior uveitis |
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| Dinkin[ | May 2020 | 2 | High | Case 1: ptosis, diplopia Case 2: diplopia, abduction deficit | Case 1: mydriasis, ptosis and limited depression, adduction, and abduction Case 2: enhancement of the optic nerve sheaths and posterior Tenon capsules | Case 1: third and sixth nerve palsy Case 2: optic nerve involvement |
| Falcone[ | June 2020 | 1 | Medium | Binocular diplopia | Esotropia and limitation of abduction of the left eye. Atrophic left lateral rectus muscle in MRI | Sixth nerve palsy |
| de Oliveira[ | June 2020 | 1 | Low | Binocular diplopia and occipital headache | MRI showed vertebrobasilar system vasculitis, inflammation in the periaqueductal region and trochlear nuclei topography | Fourth nerve palsy |
| *The studies are categorized based on the section of the eye involved in a study
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Characteristics and main findings of the included studies (retina, neuro–ophthalmology, thromboembolic, and postmortem findings)
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| Casagrande[ | May 2020 | 14 | Medium | Positivity of retinal biopsy samples in 3 of 14 (21.4%) COVID-19 patients | ||
| Marinho[ | May 2020 | 12 | High | Hyper-reflective lesions in ganglion cell and inner plexiform layers more obvious at the papillomacular bundle, normal OCT-angiography and ganglion cells complex analysis in all patients, cotton wool spots and microhemorrhages in four (33.3%) patients | ||
| Quintana-Castanedo[ | July 2020 | 1 | High | Visually asymptomatic | Retinal vasculitis on the equator of the left eye, one perivascular infiltrate, and extended retinal exudates | Retinal vasculitis |
| Burgos-Blasco[ | July 2020 | 5 | Medium | Visually asymptomatic | Seven out of eight (87.5%) eyes showed an increase in RNFLT | |
| Insausti-García[ | July 2020 | 1 | Low | Reduced sensitivity of the visual field in left eye | Tortuous and dilated retinal vessels, retinal hemorrhages, and disc edema | Papillo-phlebitis |
| Raony[ | June 2020 | 0 | N/A | Cytokine storm can aggravate retinal lesions in infected patients with DM. CD-147 may also facilitate retinal invasion of SARS-CoV-2 | ||
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| Gutiérrez-Ortiz[ | April 2020 | 2 | Medium | Case 1: right INO and fascicular oculomotor palsy Case 2: bilateral abducens palsy | Case 1: albuminocytologic dissociation, positive GD1b-IgG antibodies Case 2: albuminocytologic dissociation | Case 1:MFS Case 2: polyneuritis cranialis |
| Lantos[ | May 2020 | 1 | Low | Left eye drooping, blurry vision, reduced sensation in both legs, ataxia | Third cranial nerve enhancement and enlargement in MRI consistent with third nerve palsy, bilateral sixth nerve palsy decreased sensation below the knees to all modalities | MFS |
| Kaya[ | April 2020 | 1 | Medium | Acute confusional state, vision loss | MRI showed vasogenic edema similar to posterior reversible leukoencephalopathy (PRES) | PRES |
| Doo†
[ | July 2020 | 2 | High | Visually asymptomatic | Bilateral posterior cerebral vasogenic edema in one case | PRES |
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| Agarwal | August 2020 | 115 | High | 30% of COVID-19 patients with brain MRI had leukoencephalopathy and/or cerebral microbleeds | ||
| Cariddi[ | June 2020 | 1 | High | Blurred vision, altered mental status | Decreased nasolabial fold, tone and strength of the legs, and all deep tendon reflexes | PRES |
| Parauda | July 2020 | 4 | High | Visually asymptomatic | Imaging showed cerebral vasogenic edema in four cases | PRES |
| Zhou[ | June 2020 | 1 | Medium | Bilateral subacute vision loss of both eyes. Pain with eye movements | Bilateral disc edema and venous congestion. Retinal perivenous hemorrhages in the right eye. Positive MOG-IgG. Both optic nerve enhancement | Optic neuritis associated with MOG-IgG |
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| Dumitrascu[ | May 2020 | 1 | Medium | Sudden onset vision loss, no light perception | Retinal and optic disc edema, retinal exudates, attenuated retinal vessels, and absent macular cherry-red spot | Ophthalmic artery occlusion |
| Acharya[ | June 2020 | 1 | High | Sudden onset vision loss | Indistinct optic nerve margins, cherry red spot, significant retinal whitening | Central retinal artery occlusion |
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| Casagrande[ | May 2020 | 14 | Medium | Mentioned in the | ||
| Löffler[ | June 2020 | 3 | High | Case 1: optic atrophy Case 2: epiretinal gliosis, retinal paving-stone and spot bleeding, and drusen Case 3: AMD, macular atrophy, photoreceptor loss of outer retina, choroid thinning, and pinguecula | Case 1: MS Case 2: diabetic and hypertensive Case 3: Parkinsonism | |
| Bayyoud[ | June 2020 | 5 | Medium | No viral RNA in samples of corneal stroma, endothelium and epithelium, conjunctival fluid swabs, bulbar-limbal conjunctiva, anterior chamber fluid | ||
| Bayyoud[ | June 2020 | 1 | Low | No viral RNA in conjunctival fluid swabs, bulbar conjunctiva, corneal epithelium, stroma, and endothelium, anterior chamber fluid, lens, iris, vitreous, retina, uvea, sclera, and optic nerve | ||
| Fuest[ | July 2020 | 23 | Medium | No viral RNA in conjunctival swabs | ||
| *The studies are categorized based on the section of the eye involved in a study
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