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Uveal Diseases Umut Aslı Dinç., MD., FEBO

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1 Uveal Diseases Umut Aslı Dinç., MD., FEBO
Associate Professor in Ophthalmology Yeditepe University Eye Hospital

2 Uveal Tract Pigmented, vascular structure
that lies between the sclera&retina Consists of: İris Ciliary body Choroid

3 Uveal Tract Supplies most of the ocular vasculature through the anterior and posterior ciliary branches of ophthalmic artery. Produces aqeous humor Controls accomodation at near Supplies aqeous outflow by trabecular meshwork

4 Uveitis Inflammation of the uveal tract and adjacent structures.
Mostly the cause is unknown.

5 Uveitis Classification
Anterior uveitis (iris and ciliary body) Iritis, anterior cyclitis, iridocyclitis Intermediate uveitis (pars plana of ciliary body, anterior vitreus and peripheral retina) Posterior cyclitis, pars planitis Posterior uveitis (choroid) Choroiditis, chorioretinits Panuveitis

6 Uveitis Classification
Acute uveitis Chronic uveitis

7 Acute Uveitis-Clinical Features
Pain Redness Photophia Epiphora Blurred vision Floaters

8 Chronic Uveitis-Clinical Features
Fewer or none of the acute symptoms Periods of exacerbations and remissions

9 Causes of Uveitis Idiopathic
Infectious (bacterial, viral, fungal, parasitic) Traumatic Post-surgery Tuberculosis Sarcoidosis Behçet’s disease Spondiloartropathies Inflammatory bowel diseases Collagen vascular diseases Medication

10 History taking in uveitis
Present illness Onset, course, symptoms, laterality Past ocular history Previous episodes, treatment, ocular trauma or surgery Medical history Systemic disease (sarcoidosis, tuberculosis, syphilis, Juvenile rheumatoid artritis, AIDS, etc), maternal infection Sexual history, intravenous drug abuse Demograhic data Age, sex, race

11 History taking in uveitis
Review of symptoms General-fever, weight loss, malaise, night sweats Rheumatologic-arthralgias, lower back pain, joint sitffness Dermatologic-rashes, sores, alopecia, vitiligo, poliosis, insect bites Neurologic-tinnitus, headache, meningism, paresthesias, weaksness/paralysis GIS- diarrhea, bloody stools, aphtous ulcers GUS-dysuria, discharge, genital ulcers, balanitis

12 Uveitis-Clinical Features
Inflammatory cells in the anterior chamber Keratic precipitates on corneal endothelium Anterior synechiae (adhesions of iris to cornea) Posterior synechiae (adhesions of iris to lens) Inflammatory cells in the vitreous cavity (vitritis) Sheating of retinal vessels Optic disc or macular edema Choroidal or chorioretinal infiltrates

13 Anterior Uveitis Anterior segment cells Anterior segment flare

14 Anterior Uveitis Scleral injection Keratic precipitates on corneal
endothelium

15 Anterior Uveitis Posterior synechiae

16 Anterior Uveitis Idiopathic
Infectious (Herpetic uveitis, Bacteriel uveitis) Traumatic Fuch’s heterochromic iridocyclitis Immune-mediated Behçet’s disease Seronegative spondiloartropathies (Ankylosing Spondylitis, Reactive (Reiter) Arthritis, Psoriatic Arthritis ) Inflammatory bowel diseases (Crohn disease, ulcerative colitis) Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis Sarcoidosis Tuberculosis Toxic (Rifabutin, sulfonamides, cidofovir)

17 Idiopathic anterior uveitis
Most common form of ocular inflammation No systemic or ocular cause Relief with topical steroids and cycloplegic drops

18 Fuch’s heterochromic iridocyclitis
Unilateral Heterochromia (lighter iris color is typical) Vision loss secondary glaucoma and cataract

19 Fuch’s heterochromic iridocyclitis
Heterochromia due to iris atrophy

20 Herpetic uveitis Keratitis Iris atrophy

21 Herpetic zoster uveitis

22 Behçet’s disease Key features Uveitis (anterior, posterior)
Recurrent oral ulcers Recurrent genital ulcers Skin lesions Associated features Erythema nodosum Arthritis İntestinal ulcers Vascular lesions-thrombophlebitis, arteriel occlusions, aneurysms CNS involvement

23 Behçet’s disease HLA-B51 Pathergy test +

24 Seronegative spondiloartropathies
HLA B27 + Sacroiliac joint radiography

25 Juvenile Rheumathoid Arthritis
Most frequently in RF (-), ANA (+), oligoarticular type White eye Band keratopathy Posterior synechiae Cataract

26 Sarcoidosis Noncaseating granuloma Anterior and posterior uveitis
Bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy Pulmonary parenchymal disease Chest radiography Serum ACE enzyme

27 Sarcoidosis Granulomatous reaction with iris nodules and mutton fat keratic precipitates

28 Tuberculosis Caseating granuloma Anterior and posterior uveitis
Chronic inflammation PPD test Chest Radiography

29 Tuberculosis Granulomatous reaction with iris nodules and mutton fat keratic precipitates

30 Intermediate Uveitis Blurred vision and floaters Typically bilateral
Vision loss secondary to cystoid macular edema Pars planitis... idiopathic type

31 Intermediate Uveitis Vitreous snowballs
Snowbanking (exudation at pars plana)

32 Intermediate Uveitis Perivascular sheating Vitreous snowball

33 Posterior Uveitis Vitritis Choroiditis Retinitis Papillitis
Retinal detachment

34 Posterior Uveitis Viral (CMV, VZV, HIV in immunodeficiency) Bacterial
Fungal (candida albicans, histoplasma capsulatum, coccidioides immitis) Toxoplasmosis Parasitic (toxocariasis, cysticercosis, onchocerciasis) Syphilis Behçet’s disease Sarcoidosis Tuberculosis

35 Viral Posterior Uveitis
CMV chorioretinitis

36 Viral Posterior Uveitis
Acute retinal necrosis secondary to HSV infection

37 Viral Posterior Uveitis
HIV chorioretinitis

38 Fungal Posterior Uveitis
Ocular candidiasis

39 Toxoplasmosis Toxoplasma gondii
Transmission by infected raw meat or congenitally via plasenta Recurrent chorioretinitis and severe vitritis Toxoplasma IgM, IgG and PCR

40 Congenital Toxoplasmosis
Nonactive chorioretinal scars

41 Toxoplasmosis “Headlight in fog”

42 Toxocariasis Typical toxocara granuloma Traction of macula, optic disc
Tx: steroids Severe inflammation when microorganism dies.

43 Sarcoidosis

44 Tuberculosis Choroidal tubercule

45 Behçet’s disease

46 Syphilis Usually in acquired syphilis VDRL, RPR, FTA-ABs+

47 Anti-inflammatory Therapy
Corticosteroids Topical drops/ periocular injection/ systemic) Cytotoxic drugs Antimetabolites (azathioprine, methotrexate) Alkylating agents (cyclophoshamide, chlorambucil) Immunomodulator agents (cyclosporin, tacrolimus) Anti-TNF agents (etanercept, infliximab, adalimumab)

48 Complications of Uveitis
Band keratopathy Posterior synechiae Cataract Glaucoma Cystoid macular edema Optic atrophy


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