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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37602985

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To describe how underlying retinal diseases, such as retinitis pigmentosa, increase the risk of chloroquine-induced macular toxicity. METHODS: Observational case report. RESULTS: We present the case of a 57-year-old woman being annually followed-up in the Ophthalmology service due to a systemic treatment with chloroquine (CQ). The explorations were successive normal, until a 10:2 visual field (VF) shows central defects in both eyes. Despite CQ treatment is discontinued, 10:2 VF reveal slowly progressive macular defects. During follow-up, fundus examination disclosed bone spicules in the inferonasal middle periphery: the electroretinogram (ERG) shows slow amplitude responses under scotopic conditions and the electrooculogram (EOG) also shows pathological responses. Therefore, the diagnosis of sector retinitis pigmentosa plus chloroquine maculopathy is made. Currently, the slow but constant progression of both peripheral and central defects is evident, despite having discontinued CQ treatment more than 15 years ago. CONCLUSION: Underlying retinal diseases seem to increase the risk of photoreceptor damage when undergoing a toxic insult. Thus, we hypothesize a potential interplay between retinal dystrophies and toxic maculopathy induced by CQ, and the influence of each of them in the evolution and prognosis of the other.

2.
Am J Ophthalmol Case Rep ; 22: 101045, 2021 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33718660

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To describe an unusual case of ocular thelaziosis due to Thelazia callipaeda, an underdiagnosed and emerging zoonosis. OBSERVATIONS: We report an 81-year-old woman presented to our emergency department with a week long history of bilateral redness and tearing that had not improved despite antibiotics and corticosteroid topical treatment. Slit-lamp biomicroscopy showed signs of bilateral conjunctivitis and mucopurulent discharge in fornices. Under the upper tarsal conjunctiva of the left eye, two filiform worms were identified, which were removed and sent on wet mount slides for microscopic examination and genetic identification. The rest of the ophthalmoscopic examination was rigorously normal. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay turned positive for Thelazia callipaeda. During further questioning, the patient reported that she had been on summer vacation in contact with dogs which were infected with eye worms. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPORTANCE: Ocular thelaziosis is an emerging zoonosis in Spain, but also in the rest of the world. Ophthalmologists should include ocular thelaziosis in humans as a possible cause of conjunctivitis, tearing, and corneal ulcer, thus avoiding underdiagnosis and inappropriate treatments. The epidemiology of the disease makes anamnesis essential. A confocal biomicroscopy is a useful device for identifying this eyeworm but the definitive diagnosis will be made taking into account the morphological identification under microscope, together with the molecular identification by PCR techniques.

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