Author:
Tsui Jennifer KS,Poon Stephanie Hiu Ling,Fung Nicholas Siu Kay
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Ocular tuberculosis (TB) affects 1–2% of patients with TB, with TB uveitis being the most common. This series aims to look at different manifestations of tuberculosis associated uveitis and the different tests used to make a presumptive or definitive diagnosis.
Methods
Patients diagnosed with TB related uveitis in Hong Kong SAR between 2017 and 2020 were reviewed. Demographics, clinical features, investigations and treatments of patients were collected.
Results
Fifteen eyes in 10 patients with a mean age 57.30 ± 10.17 years were included. The ocular manifestations on presentation included anterior uveitis (50%), posterior uveitis (40%) and panuveitis (10%), where 70% of them were unilateral and 30% were bilaterally infected; on subsequent visits the manifestations further developed into posterior uveitis (40%), panuveitis (40%) and anterior uveitis (20%), where 50% of them were unilateral and 50% bilateral infected. Tuberculosis tests were positive in 5 out of 7 Mantoux tests, 4 out of 4 T-SPOT TB tests, 3 out of 4 QuantiFERON-TB gold tests, 1 out of 1 lymph node biopsy, 0 out of 9 chest x-rays, and no aqueous fluid polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was tested. Vision impairing complications were seen in 6 patients where retinal vasculitis was most commonly seen. With anti-TB treatment prescribed in 9 patients, side effects occurred in 5 patients, including ocular hypertension, disc swelling, and hepatitis.
Conclusions
Ocular TB infections may manifest in various forms, and can involve different parts of the eye. Bilateral involvement of TB is commonly presented, and both eyes should be evaluated at every follow up. When TB is suspected in a patient, diagnostic confirmation requires multimodal investigations where a negative chest x-ray is not useful in ruling out ocular TB infections, especially in an endemic region like Hong Kong. In these patients, it is crucial to have a high index of suspicion for TB, even when they do not demonstrate classical respiratory signs and symptoms of TB.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reference27 articles.
1. World Health Organisation (WHO) GTP. Global tuberculosis report 2022. In: Organisation WH, ed., 2022.
2. Global tuberculosis report. 2019. In: Organization WH, ed., 2019.
3. Elimination DoT. The Difference Between Latent TB Infection and TB Disease. In: (CDC) CfDCaP, ed., 2014.
4. Alastair KO, Denniston PIM. Oxford Handbook of Ophthalmology: Oxford University Press 2018.
5. Ang M, Wong W, Ngan C, et al. Interferon-gamma release assay as a diagnostic test for tuberculosis-associated uveitis. Eye. 2012;26(5):658–65.
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献