West Nile Virus Infection

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Evan (Jake) Waxman MD PhD
Advertisements

West Nile Fever and Encephalitis From Mayoclinic.com.
1 West Nile Virus and Mosquito Control K. Bennett, R.P. Bio. Manager, Environment Services May 2003.
Central Serous Chorioretinopathy rare but typical changes Dr Edi Ladavac Department of Ophthalmology General Hospital, Pula.
Methotrimeprazine-induced Corneal Deposits and Cataract Jae-Woong Koh (MD/PhD) Seong-Taeck Kim (MD) Department of Ophthalmology, Chosun University College.
Hlavacova P., Vlkova E., Doskova H.
Cancer Associated Retinopathy
Assist. Lecturer of Ophthalmology
Chikungunya Retinitis
Tuberculosis Marco Coassin, Sylvia Marchi, Erika Mandarà, Valentina Mastrofilippo, Anna Maria Soldani and Luca Cimino Ocular Immunology.
Neuroretinitis secondary to Bartonella henselae
Cat Scratch Disease Rupesh Agrawal, Carlos Pavesio
Bartonella Neuroretinitis
Ahmed Y. Hatata, MSc Rowayda M. Amin, MSc Assistant Lecturer Ophthalmology Alexandria University, Egypt Toxocariasis.
Neuroretinitis Anna-Maria Gerlach, Werner Inhoffen Deshka Doycheva, Manfred Zierhut Centre of Ophthalmology University of Tuebigen Germany.
Posner-Schlossman Syndrome Bianka Sobolewska, MD Manfred Zierhut, MD Centre of Ophthalmology University of Tuebingen, Germany.
Lens induced Uveitis Dr. Rathinam Sivakumar HOD - Uveitis Services Dr. Radhika. T Consultant, Uveitis Service Dr. Vedhanayaki Rajesh Dr. Vedhanayaki Rajesh.
TB choroiditis presenting like Birdshot retinochoroidopathy Rupesh Agrawal, Carlos Pavesio Moorfields Eye Hospital, NHS Foundation Trust, London, United.
ACUTE RETINAL NECROSIS
Persistent placoid Maculopathy TB related Rupesh Agrawal, Carlos Pavesio Moorfields Eye Hospital, NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom.
Tubulointerstitial Nephritis and Uveitis (TINU) Syndrome Sana Khochtali Imen Ksiaa Anis Mahmoud Bechir Jelliti Department of Ophthalmology Fattouma Bourguiba.
Central serous chorioretinopathy and uveitis Central serous chorioretinopathy and uveitis Rim Kahloun, MD Sonia Zaouali, MD Moncef Khairallah, MD Moncef.
Centre of Ophthalmology University of Tuebingen, Germany
Posterior Scleritis associated with Orbital Pseudotumor Nikolas London, MD Retina Consultants San Diego.
Manfred Zierhut Manfred Zierhut Centre of Ophthalmology University of Tuebingen, Germany Masquerade Syndrome.
Cryptococcus choroiditis
Rubella-virus associated uveitis
A CASE OF INFECTIOUS AND AUTOIMMUNE DISEASE COEXISTENCE Elisabetta Miserocchi MD Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences University Hospital San.
Choroidal Tuberculoma Rupesh Agrawal, Carlos Pavesio Moorfields Eye Hospital, NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom.
Live intraocular worm causing multifocal choroiditis Dr Mamta Agarwal Dr J Biswas.
Acute choroidal ischemia and Toxoplasmic Retinochoroiditis Acute choroidal ischemia and Toxoplasmic Retinochoroiditis Sonia Attia, MD Imen Ksiaa, MD Moncef.
Sympathetic Ophthalmitis Annie Mathai, Rajeev K Reddy, Hemant S Trehan, Ritesh Narula Smt.Kanuri Santhamma Retina Vitreous Centre, Kallam Anji Reddy Campus,
Punctate Inner Choroidopathy Ahmed Magdy Bedda, MD, PhD Professor of Ophthalmology Rowayda M. Amin, MSc Assistant lecturer of Ophthalmology Alexandria.
Primary Inflammatory Choriocapillaropathy Rupesh Agrawal, Carlos Pavesio Moorfields Eye Hospital, NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom.
Cryptococcus neoformans Choroiditis Rupesh Agrawal, Ho Su Ling, Stephen Teoh Tan Tock Seng Hospital, National Healthcare Group Eye Institute, Singapore.
Bilateral panuveitis in aN ELDERLY woman
Arthropod-borne Viruses
Figure 1.Evanescent rashes on the upper limbs (A and B)
Ocular Manifestations of Diabetes
Presumed tuberculosis-associated uveitis: rising incidence and widening diagnostic criteria in non-endemic area Nikolas Krassas1, Jane Wells1, Christine.
Posner-Schlossman Syndrome
Sympathetic Ophthalmitis
Grand Rounds Retinal vascular disease with unique findings
Dr. JAMAL R Al-Rawi, MBChB, MSc, FICMS
Royal Thai Army Roles of mosquito vectors, bats, and swine in the epidemiology of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases Akina Sukasem, 2LT Kanokporn.
Central Retinal Vein Occlusion Secondary to Cataract Surgery Austin Bach, DO, MPH, Capritta Roberts, BHS, Benjamin P. Rice, DO, Joel W. Nelson, DO, Alexander.
Ocular Features of West Nile Virus Infection in North America
Ophthalmic Res 2017;57: DOI: /
Central retinal vein occlusion as the only manifestation of syphilis
Granuloma by Toxocara Canis
First Presentation – OCT OS
Rickettsiosis Rim Kahloun, MD Bechir Jelliti, MD Salim Ben Yahia, MD
Zika Virus in Pregnancy
Consultant, Uveitis Service
Rebekah Doyle, Ph.D student
Corneal Endothelial and Anterior Lenticular Deposits Due to Clozapine
Anterior Uveitis in a Child
Atypical case of Vogt- Koyanagi-Harada disease
Man With Blurred Vision
Inflammatory Chorioretinopathies of Unknown Etiology
Vogt-Koyanagi Harada Disease
Inflammatory choroidal neovascularization
National Institue of Infectious Diseases
Multiple evanescent white dot syndrome
Acute Placoid Multifocal Posterior Pigment Epitheliopathy
Multiple Evanescent White Dot Syndrome (MEWDS)
Sonia Attia, MD Sana Khochtali, MD Nesrine Abroug, MD
Case Study Toolkit For general ophthalmologists and specialists treating non-anterior non-infectious uveitis Date of preparation: February 2019 | ALL-IMMU
Presentation transcript:

West Nile Virus Infection Rim Kahloun, MD Salim Ben Yahia, MD Moncef Khairallah, MD Department of ophthalmology Fattouma Bourguiba University Hospital Faculty of Medicine, University of Monastir Monastir, Tunisia

History A 52-year-old woman History: diabetes

Presentation Visual acuity: 20/25 OD, 20/32 OS No cells in anterior chamber or vitreous OU Intraocular pressure: 14 mm Hg OU Mild cataract OU Fundus OU: Inactive multifocal chorioretinitis

Fundus photography shows inactive multifocal chorioretinitis OU Fundus photography shows inactive multifocal chorioretinitis OU. Note the presence of mild non proliferative diabetic retinopathy.

Fluorescein angiography Mid-phase fluorescein angiogram shows central hypofluorescence and peripheral hyperfluorescence of chorioretinal lesions (“target-like” appearance). Note the linear clustering of chorioretinal lesions, especially OS.

Initial work-up For causes of multifocal chorioretinitis: - Syphilis - Tuberculosis - Sarcoidosis - Histoplasmosis - Idiopathic multifocal chorioretinitis Negative

Work-up History retaking: Episode of febrile illness with severe headache six months before presentation (during the summer season) Serology: positive for West Nile virus (WNV)

Treatment No specific treatment Supportive Symptomatic for ophthalmic complications

Conclusion WNV infection is a worldwide zoonotic disease caused by a single-stranded RNA flavivirus, transmitted to human by a mosquito vector (type Culex ) with wild birds serving as its reservoir Most human WNV infections are subclinical (80%) or manifest as febrile illness (20%) and occur in last summer and autumn. Severe neurologic disease (meningoencephalitis) occurs in less than 1% of patients and is associated with advanced age and diabetes

Conclusion Typical bilateral or rarely unilateral multifocal chorioretinitis is the most common ocular manifestation of WNV infection The unique pattern of multifocal chorioretinitis can help establish an early diagnosis of the disease while serologic testing is pending