Endophthalmitis due to Listeria monocytogenes developed suddenly in a 52-year-old man receiving immunosuppressive therapy for a renal transplantation carried out 2 months previously. The treatment combined low doses of ciclosporin and prednisone. The initial clinical picture was of acute hypertensive uveitis with hypopyon. Despite prompt paracentesis and appropriate antibiotic therapy, the long-term course was unfavorable, and enucleation became necessary. The occurrence of listeriosis is classic in renal-transplant recipients, but no ocular form has been reported hitherto.
A 26-year-old woman presented with a painful skin eruption which led to the diagnosis of acute myeloid leukemia. During chemotherapy, she developed an unusual orbital inflammation. Careful observation of the clinical course, computed tomography, and orbital biopsy were necessary to establish the diagnosis of dacryoadenitis associated with subcutaneous Sweet's syndrome. The skin eruption and the dacryoadenitis resolved rapidly with corticosteroid therapy. This is the first report of dacryoadenitis in the course of subcutaneous Sweet's syndrome.
We were able to achieve complete cure in many patients with an overall success rate of 50%. Digital dacryography with dye flow provides good opacification of the neocanaliculus, demonstrating its nearly physiological morphology. Our study demonstrated the usefulness of this method and has encouraged us to continue proposing this canaliculoplasty technique for selected patients.
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