Fig. 3 -Picture of sibling A's pupils (current age 5 years) and sibling B's pupils (current age 2 years) in light and in darkness. Note the small physiological anisocoria in sibling A's pupils.
There are many differential diagnoses in investigating patients who present with retinal vasculitis, and the laboratory investigations used to investigate this have low-to-moderate sensitivity and/or specificity. Diagnoses include conditions such as tuberculosis or sarcoidosis, which may require long courses of antibiotics or immunosuppression. Influenza vaccination has been recognised as a cause of vasculitis for decades, although a purely ocular presentation is rare. We present a case of a 78-year-old Caucasian woman presenting with a single vessel arterial vasculitis of the right eye 8 weeks following influenza vaccination at her local general practitioner practice. We encourage ophthalmologists, rheumatologists and uveitis specialists to consider influenza vaccine as a cause of ocular vasculitis if the vaccine has been recently administered.
Objective: The COVID-19 pandemic has led to significant service loss across the NHS, and ophthalmology is one of the greatest affected specialties. We attempt to quantify the impact of the first peak of the COVID-19 pandemic on a paediatric ophthalmology unit in a children's hospital in the United Kingdom (UK) and report lessons learnt to aid in the recovery of the service.
Methods and Analysis:Two eight-week periods of clinical activity were compared; one during the first UK peak of the COVID-19 pandemic and the other during a similar period the previous year. Four areas of clinical activity were included in the study: outpatient clinic appointments, theatre activity, outpatient referrals to ophthalmology and ward reviews. Appointment data was collected from departmental databases.Results: During the first peak of the pandemic, outpatient clinic appointments were reduced by 87.2%, ophthalmic surgery by 90.9%, outpatient referrals to ophthalmology by 50.2% and ward reviews by 50%. The number of actual cancelled appointments was 1377, of which 6.8% were triaged as suitable for teleophthalmology.
Conclusion:The COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically restricted clinical activity in the ophthalmology service. Paediatric ophthalmology is vulnerable to capacity issues and the consequences of delayed or cancelled appointments. Departments must adapt quickly and maximise capacity to help reduce the backlog and treat patients effectively and safely. Solutions such as teleophthalmology have potential although can be difficult in the paediatric population.
Endoscopic vitrectomy is a useful and unique adjunct to microincision vitreoretinal surgery. The optical properties of endoscopy allow for some clinically advantageous approaches that are not possible with regular microscope viewing systems, namely, the ability to both bypass optically signficant anterior segment opacities and directly visualize dificult-to-access retroirideal, retrolental, and anterior retinal structures in their natural anatomical configuration. The surgical benefits include improved surgical access to the pars plana, pars plicata, ciliary sulcus, ciliary body, and peripheral lens, along with unique access to anterior traction in complex pediatric anterior detachments, particularly in retinopathy of prematurity. This review will focus on the development and surgical utility of intraocular endoscopy, provide an update on its current uses in the era of microincision vitreoretinal surgery, and highligh its role in pediatric vitreoretinal diseases.
DESCRIPTIONA 78-year-old man presented with a painful red right eye 9 days after uncomplicated phacoemulsification with intraocular lens implant. He had no relevant ocular or systemic history. Postoperative subconjunctival cefuroxime had been given at the end of the procedure.On current presentation, he had a best corrected vision of 6/12. He had a hypopyon with a dense fibrinous membrane. He was treated as having Figure 1 Series of optical coherence tomography (OCT) in chronological order showing the macular infarct and corresponding OCTs.
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