Scleritis is a very heterogeneous group of diseases responsible for ocular inflammation of varying severity, the evolution and prognosis of which depend on the etiology but also on the appropriate treatment. We report the case of a 15-year-old female patient, without any notable general history, followed in consultation for 3 months for a nodular scleritis not improving under usual treatments. She was reconsulted when her symptoms worsened and the examination revealed a minimal reaction of the anterior chamber, in addition to the nodular scleritis localized in the temporal region, with the notion of a vesicular eruption in the perioral region on the same side of the ocular involvement and preceding the ocular symptoms by one week, consistent with a cutaneous herpes. The patient was put on oral Aciclovir (800 mg, 3 times a day) with a clear improvement marked by a decrease in pain and redness, which improved again after the introduction of oral corticoids. The existence of an extraocular sign of herpes and the good response to antiviral treatment, thus confirming the herpetic etiology of this chronic nodular scleritis. Scleritis is caused by herpes in about 5% of cases. The clinical picture is either ophthalmic herpes zoster with associated scleritis (VZV), or diffuse anterior scleritis, unilateral in 80% of cases, related to herpes simplex. The diagnosis can be confirmed by local swabs, or more often by an antiviral therapeutic test.
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