Ripasudil appears to be safe and substantially reduce IOP in eyes with uveitic glaucoma if the eye is a responder. Ripasudil could be an option for the treatment of uveitic glaucoma.
This study aimed to evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of infliximab (IFX) and cyclosporine (CsA) combination therapy for refractory uveoretinitis in Behçet's disease (BD). Patients and methods: The study involved a retrospective review of the medical records of 11 patients with Behçet's uveoretinitis refractory to conventional treatment who had been treated with IFX+CsA combination therapy. The frequency of ocular inflammatory attacks and a Behçet's disease ocular attack score 24 (BOS24) were used as indices for the evaluation of efficacy during each 6-month period prior to and following initiation of therapy. For the assessment of safety, adverse events (AEs) were recorded throughout the treatment period. Results: The patients had received IFX+CsA combination therapy for 5.6±2.3 years. The frequency of ocular attacks per 6-month period decreased markedly from 2.9±1.6 during the baseline period to 0.6±0.9 during months 1-6, 0.5±0.9 during months 7-12, 0.3±0.5 during months 13-18, 0.3±0.7 during months 19-24, and 0.0±0.0 thereafter (P=0.003). The BOS24 score per ocular attack significantly decreased from 5.2±2.4 during the baseline period to 1.5±2.1 during months 1-6, 1.7±3.1 during months 7-12, 1.6±2.9 during months 13-18, and 0.4±1.0 during months 19-24 (P=0.002). No serious AEs were observed, with the exception of urinary tract infection and cataract progression. Two patients exhibited transient elevation of the serum creatinine level, which was normalized following a reduction in the dose of CsA. Conclusion: For refractory Behçet's uveoretinitis, IFX+CsA combination therapy offers a promising treatment option as it appears to have an acceptable safety profile and can reduce the frequency and severity of ocular inflammatory attacks over a long period of time.
ObjectiveTo evaluate the usefulness of en face slab optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging for monitoring diabetic retinal neurodegeneration with supporting animal experimental data.Research design and methodsWe retrospectively examined 72 diabetic eyes over 3 years using Cirrus-HD OCT. Two-dimensional en face slab OCT images of the innermost retina were reconstructed and graded according to the ratio of dark area to total area, and relative red, green, and blue color area ratios were calculated and used as indexes for each en face slab OCT image. Values from en face OCT images were used for statistical analyses. To obtain insight into the pathogenesis of diabetic retinal neurodegeneration, we used the InsPr-Cre;Pdk1flox/flox diabetic mouse model.ResultsBoth OCT grade and relative red color area ratio significantly increased with the advancing stage of diabetic retinopathy (p=0.018 and 0.006, respectively). After a mean follow-up period of 4.6 years, the trend was unchanged in the analyses of 42 untreated eyes (p<0.001 and 0.001, respectively). Visual acuity showed a weak but significant negative correlation with the red color ratio on en face slab OCT images, but central retinal thickness did not exhibit a clinically meaningful correlation with values obtained from en face slab OCT images. Immunohistochemical analyses of InsPr-Cre;Pdk1flox/flox diabetic mice demonstrated the loss of ganglion axon bundles and thinning of laminin without apparent retinal vascular change at the age of 20 weeks.ConclusionsEn face slab OCT imaging would be a novel useful modality for the assessment of diabetic retinal neurodegeneration as it could detect subtle optical changes occurring in the innermost retina in diabetic eyes. Our animal experimental data suggest that dark areas observed on en face slab OCT images might be the impairment of the extracellular matrix as well as neurons.
Background Vogt–Koyanagi–Harada (VKH) disease is a T-cell-mediated autoimmune disorder characterized by bilateral granulomatous panuveitis with various systemic manifestations. Although VKH disease rarely occurs in the pediatric population, the clinical course tends to be aggressive, and the visual prognosis is worse than that in adult patients due to severe ocular complications secondary to recurrent inflammation. Case presentation A 3-year-old girl with probable VKH was referred to Kobe University Hospital. She had severe bilateral panuveitis with posterior synechiae of the iris, marked optic disk swelling, and serous retinal detachment in both eyes, and her best corrected visual acuities (BCVAs) were 20/200 OD and 20/125 OS. A third course of therapy was administered because serous retinal detachment remained after two courses of therapy. She was treated with three courses of high-dose intravenous corticosteroid therapy, followed by slow tapering of oral corticosteroids. Her BCVAs recovered to 20/16 OU, and relapse of ocular inflammation and side effect of treatment were not observed during the 1.5-year follow-up period. Conclusions We experienced a pediatric patient with probable VKH disease who was treated with three courses of high-dose intravenous corticosteroid therapy. With the favorable clinical course in our patient, initial treatment with repeated high-dose intravenous corticosteroid therapy might be beneficial in pediatric VKH disease.
This study aimed to retrospectively evaluate vitreoretinal cellular infiltration in uveitis on spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT). Forty eyes of 26 patients with uveitis in the posterior segment and 22 eyes with no apparent abnormalities from 22 individual controls were enrolled. SD-OCT cross-sectional images through the fovea in all subjects were graded as follows: grade 0, absence of cell-like hyperreflective particle (CLHP); grade 1, ≤10 CLHP on the retinal surface without vitreous CLHPs; grade 2, retinal CLHPs with ≤5–10 CLHPs in the vitreous; grade 3, 11–50 vitreous CLHPs; and grade 4, ≥50 vitreous CLHPs with diffuse distribution. The sensitivity and specificity for detecting active intraocular inflammation in the classification with the presence or absence of the positive OCT-based grading scores (grade ≥1) were 85% and 95.5% respectively. Moreover, the OCT-based grading score was significantly correlated with the vitreous haze classification (R = 0.35, p = 0.029). The interobserver exact agreement of the OCT-based grading score was moderate (κ = 0.50). Thus, this newly developed OCT-based grading system for vitreoretinal cellular infiltration could a potential biomarker to evaluate inflammation in the posterior segment of the eye.
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