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Article: Ocular tuberculosis: current perspectives.

Shakarchi, Faiz I

Clinical ophthalmology (Auckland, N.Z.)

2015  Volume 9, Page(s) 2223–2227

Abstract: ... the various clinical features and management of presumed tuberculous uveitis. The current review focuses ... association is difficult to prove. Ocular tuberculosis is usually not associated with clinical evidence ... The World Health Organization currently estimates that nearly two billion people, or one ...

Abstract The World Health Organization currently estimates that nearly two billion people, or one-third of the world's population, are infected by tuberculosis, and that roughly 10% of the infected people are symptomatic. Tuberculosis affects the lungs in 80% of patients, while in the remaining 20% the disease may affect other organs, including the eye. Uveitis can be seen concurrently with tuberculosis, but a direct association is difficult to prove. Ocular tuberculosis is usually not associated with clinical evidence of pulmonary tuberculosis, as up to 60% of extrapulmonary tuberculosis patients may not have pulmonary disease. The diagnosis of tuberculous uveitis is often problematic and in nearly all reported cases, the diagnosis was only presumptive. Tuberculous uveitis is a great mimicker of various uveitis entities and it can be considered in the differential diagnosis of any type of intraocular inflammation. It is still unknown if ocular manifestations result from a direct mycobacterium infection or hypersensitivity reaction and this is reflected on the management of tuberculous uveitis. Prevalence of tuberculosis as an etiology of uveitis may reach up to 10% in endemic areas. Tuberculous uveitis is a vision-threatening disease that inevitably leads to blindness if not properly diagnosed and treated. The aim of this review is to illustrate the various clinical features and management of presumed tuberculous uveitis. The current review focuses on the diagnostic criteria, significance of tuberculin skin test, and use of systemic corticosteroids in the management of tuberculous uveitis as recommended in recent publications.
Language English
Publishing date 2015-11-26
Publishing country New Zealand
Document type Journal Article ; Review
ISSN 1177-5467
ISSN 1177-5467
DOI 10.2147/OPTH.S65254
Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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