Selected article for: "report case and SARS case"

Author: Providência, Joana; Fonseca, Cristina; Henriques, Filipe; Proença, Rui
Title: Serpiginous choroiditis presenting after SARS-CoV-2 infection: A new immunological trigger?
  • Cord-id: hz3016zm
  • Document date: 2020_12_2
  • ID: hz3016zm
    Snippet: INTRODUCTION To report the first case of a serpiginous choroiditis presenting after SARS-CoV-2 infection in a previously healthy young woman. CASE DESCRIPTION A 41-year-old woman reported blurry vision OS 1 month after a mild SARS-CoV-2 infection. Left eye fundus examination revealed multiple peripapillary atrophic lesions, adjacent to a larger diffuse, ill-defined, yellow-whitish deep amoeboid-like patch, involving the peripapillary region and extending temporally to the fovea. Multimodal imagi
    Document: INTRODUCTION To report the first case of a serpiginous choroiditis presenting after SARS-CoV-2 infection in a previously healthy young woman. CASE DESCRIPTION A 41-year-old woman reported blurry vision OS 1 month after a mild SARS-CoV-2 infection. Left eye fundus examination revealed multiple peripapillary atrophic lesions, adjacent to a larger diffuse, ill-defined, yellow-whitish deep amoeboid-like patch, involving the peripapillary region and extending temporally to the fovea. Multimodal imaging including fluorescein angiography, indocyanine-green angiography, fundus autofluorescence and optical coherence tomography was consistent with serpiginous choroiditis. A complete systemic work-up was performed to exclude potential infectious or inflammatory etiologies. The active choroidal lesions responded to high dose corticosteroids, with functional improvement. Immunomodulatory therapy with methotrexate was initiated for long-term management. CONCLUSION Serpiginous choroiditis is a rare but important sight-threatening condition that has been previously associated to viral infections, which seem to have a role in the induction and/or perpetuation of choroidal inflammation. SARS-CoV-2 infection appears to have played a role as a possible trigger for intraocular inflammation in this case. Therefore, COVID-19 patients reporting visual symptoms should be carefully evaluated in order to obtain adequate ophthalmological management to avoid irreversible visual damage.

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