| Literature DB >> 35321250 |
Yong Tang1, Rui Dou1, Yuyan Liu1, Shiyong Xie1, Quanhong Han1.
Abstract
Purpose: To report the first known case of bilateral cystoid macular edema in a patient undergoing long-term loratadine treatment. Observations: A 49-year-old Chinese woman who had been undergoing treatment with loratadine for the past 6 years presented with decreased visual acuity and bilateral cystoid macular edema (CME). Upon cessation of loratadine, macular edema partially resolved, and visual acuity markedly improved. Fundus autofluorescence (FAF), optical coherence tomography (OCT), and fluorescence fundus angiography (FFA) were used to document the severity of CME and its subsequent resolution after cessation of loratadine therapy. Conclusions and Importance: Long-term use of loratadine might cause CME that partially resolves with discontinuation of the drug. The pathophysiology of drug-induced CME without leakage remains unclear. Dysfunction of histamine receptor1-expressed retinal neurons and the associated signal transduction, toxicity to Müller cells or RPE cells with subsequent intracellular fluid accumulation, and subclinical damage to the blood-retina barrier leading to leakage of extracellular fluid, have been proposed.Entities:
Keywords: Cystoid macular edema; Histamine; Loratadine; Optical coherence tomography
Year: 2022 PMID: 35321250 PMCID: PMC8935523 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajoc.2022.101477
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Ophthalmol Case Rep ISSN: 2451-9936
Fig. 1Multimodal images of both eyes (OD/OS) at initial examination. (A, B) Retinal blood vessels were normal with no edema, bleeding or exudation as observed in wide-field fundus photograph. No definite fovea reflections bilaterally. (C, E) BAF reveals stellate appearance of the fovea bilaterally with no evidence of posterior segment inflammation or optic disc hyperfluorescence. (D, F) IR AF shows abnormal areas of hyporeflectance in the central macula. (G–J) FFA shows stellate appearance of the fovea bilaterally with no evidence of vascular leakage or optic disc hyperfluorescence. (K–N) OCT shows intraretinal cystic changes, mainly affecting the outer plexiform layer (OPL) and outer nuclear layer (ONL) with ellipsoid zone disruption.
BAF, Blue-light Fundus autofluorescece; IR AF, Near-infrared autofluorescence; FFA, fundus fluorescence angiography; OCT, ocular contrast tomography. (For interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the Web version of this article.)
Fig. 2OCT changes in both eyes. (A,E) Baseline examination. Intraretinal cystic changes in fovea, mainly affect IPL and OPL with discontinuity of outer retinal layers. (B) Changes at one month after cessation of loratadine; macular cystic changes partially resolved. (C) Two months after cessation of loratadine; continued resolution of intraretinal cysts and outer retinal layers. (D) Six months after cessation of loratadine; residual intraretinal cysts still observed in OD. Complete restoration of intraretinal layers and partial recovery of outer layers in OS.
IPL, inner plexiform layer; OPL, outer plexiform layer; OCT, ocular computed tomography.