RESUMO
Acute methanol poisoning is first and foremost life-threatening. Otherwise, functional prognosis is mainly based on ocular impairment. In this case series we aimed to describe the ocular manifestations after acute methanol poisoning during an outbreak in Tunisia. The data from 21 patients (41 eyes) were analysed. All patients underwent a complete ophthalmological examination including visual fields, colour vision test and optical coherence tomography with evaluation of the retinal nerve fibre layer. Patients were classified into two groups. Group 1 included patients with visual symptoms and group 2 included patients with no visual symptoms. Ocular abnormalities were seen in 81.8% of patients with ocular symptoms. They included: optic neuropathy in 7 patients (63.6%); central retinal artery occlusion in 1 patient (9.1%); and central serous chorioretinopathy in 1 patient (9.1%). Mean blood methanol levels were significantly higher in patients without ocular symptoms (p = .03).
RESUMO
PURPOSE: To describe clinical features and the course of a case of non-necrotizing herpetic retinitis secondary to Varicella zoster virus (VZV). MATERIEL AND METHODS: A single case report documented with multimodal imaging. RESULTS: A 52-year-old female patient with a past medical history of diabetes mellitus who presented with painful red right eye (OD). Ophthalmic examination showed perilimbal conjunctival nodule, granulomatous anterior uveitis, sectoral iris atrophy and increased intraocular pressure. Fundus examination in OD revealed posterior multifocal retinitis. Left eye examination was unremarkable. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of aqueous humor sample confirmed the presence of VZV DNA. Systemic antiviral therapy allowed the improvement of intraocular inflammation and disappearance of the retinal non necrotizing retinitis after one year of regular follow-up. CONCLUSION: Non-necrotizing retinitis is an underdiagnosed form of VZV ocular infection.