Massive mycobacterial choroiditis during highly active antiretroviral therapy: Another immune-recovery uveitis?
To describe the ocular presentation of disseminated mycobacterial disease occurring during immune-recovery in a patient with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Case report and literature review. A 41-year-old AIDS patient with a prior diagnosis of cytomegalovirus retinitis. The patient deve...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ophthalmology (Rochester, Minn.) Minn.), 2002-11, Vol.109 (11), p.2144-2148 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | To describe the ocular presentation of disseminated mycobacterial disease occurring during immune-recovery in a patient with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS).
Case report and literature review.
A 41-year-old AIDS patient with a prior diagnosis of cytomegalovirus retinitis.
The patient developed progressive, bilateral multifocal choroiditis with panuveitis 2 months after beginning and responding to highly active antiretroviral therapy. His left eye became blind and painful and was enucleated. Pathologic examination revealed massive choroiditis with well-formed, discrete granulomas and multiple intracellular and extracellular acid-fast organisms within the choroidal granulomas. Culture and polymerase chain reaction of vitreous specimens revealed Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC).
Empiric, and later sensitivity-guided, local and systemic antibiotic therapy was used to treat the remaining right eye, but it continued to deteriorate. Despite medical therapy, three vitrectomies and repeated intravitreal injections of amikacin, a total retinal detachment ensued. One week after the third vitrectomy, the patient died from mesenteric artery thrombosis in the setting of disseminated mycobacterial disease.
This is the first report of ocular inflammation as the presenting finding in the recently recognized syndrome of immune-recovery MAC disease. Pathogenesis of this entity is related to an enhanced immune response to a prior, subclinical, disseminated infection. The formation of discrete granulomas, normally absent in MAC infections in AIDS, reflects this mechanism. |
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ISSN: | 0161-6420 1549-4713 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0161-6420(01)01048-X |