Active toxoplasma chorioretinitis in immunocompromised patients: a case series.
Mustafa KayabaşıTurhan MammadovSeher KöksaldıGül ArıkanSüleyman KaynakAli Osman SaatciPublished in: Archive of clinical cases (2024)
Toxoplasma chorioretinitis (TC) can exhibit atypical features in immunocompromised patients including bilaterality, extensive spread, multifocal presentation, large areas of retinal necrosis without adjacent retinal scarring, and diffuse necrotizing retinitis resembling the viral retinitis that may cause confusion in the differential diagnosis. The aim of this study was to present the clinical features of four eyes of three immunocompromised patients with active toxoplasma chorioretinitis. Two of the patients were female and one, male. Two patients had hematological malignancies and the remaining patient was under adalimumab treatment for ankylosing spondylitis. Visual complaints began 10 days to four months prior to TC diagnosis. All four eyes had mild-to-moderate anterior chamber cells together with severe vitritis on slit-lamp examination while there were solitary chorioretinitis lesions on fundoscopy. Despite all patients were negative for anti-toxoplasma immunoglobulin M, all were positive for immunoglobulin G. All three patients were successfully treated with a combined treatment of systemic and intravitreal anti-toxoplasmic drugs. Clinicians should be cautious for the possible toxoplasma chorioretinitis besides the other infectious entities when a new uveitis episode is detected in an immunosuppressed patient in order to avoid misdiagnosis and thereby wrong treatment.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- prognostic factors
- ankylosing spondylitis
- rheumatoid arthritis
- intensive care unit
- sars cov
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- oxidative stress
- diabetic retinopathy
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- drug induced
- cell cycle arrest
- quantum dots
- optic nerve
- rare case