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CLINICAL PREDICTORS OF TUBERCULAR RETINAL VASCULITIS IN A HIGH-ENDEMIC COUNTRY

Hrishikesh Kaza, Mudit Tyagi, Avinash Pathengay, Soumyava Basu

2020Retina21 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine clinical signs suggestive of tubercular etiology in retinal vasculitis. METHODS: A retrospective comparative study of patients who presented with retinal vasculitis at three tertiary care centers in India. All patients underwent detailed clinical evaluation and tailored laboratory investigations for etiological diagnosis. Tubercular etiology was diagnosed on basis on the presence of retinal periphlebitis in association with ancillary evidence of systemic tuberculosis and exclusion of nontuberculosis entities. Patients with tubercular (Group A) and nontubercular (Group B) etiology were compared for demographic characteristics, supportive diagnostic evidence, and specific ocular signs. Statistical analysis was performed at 5% confidence levels. RESULTS: Of the 114 patients diagnosed with retinal vasculitis, Group A had 69 patients (100 eyes) and Group B had 45 patients (75 eyes). Active or healed subvascular lesions (P ≤ 0.0001), focal vascular tortuosity (P ≤ 0.0001), and occlusive vasculitis (P = 0.002) were significantly more common in Group A patients than in Group B patients. All three were independent predictors of tubercular etiology on multivariate regression analysis. CONCLUSION: The presence of healed or active subvascular lesions, focal vascular tortuosity, and occlusive vasculitis could be predictive of tubercular etiology in retinal vasculitis.

Topics & Concepts

EtiologyRetinal vasculitisMedicineVasculitisInternal medicineRetinalDermatologyPathologyOphthalmologyDiseaseOcular Diseases and Behçet’s SyndromeInfectious Diseases and TuberculosisOtitis Media and Relapsing Polychondritis
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