Objective To observe the clinical features and treatment outcomes of presumed tubercular retinal vasculitis. Methods This is a retrospective non-comparative interventional clinical research. A total of nine patients (11 eyes) with major presentation of retinal vasculitis were included in this study. Patients first consulted the eye clinic and were diagnosed presumed tubercular retinal vasculitis. The patients, seven males and two females, aged from 19 to 66 years, with an average of 43.89 years. The time interval from symptoms to diagnosis ranged from two weeks to six months with an average of 76.27 days. Visual acuity, slit lamp ophthalmoscopy, fundus fluorescein angiography (FFA), optical coherence tomography (OCT), hematological and tuberculosis related investigations were examined and analyzed. All patients had standard anti-tuberculosis treatment. Treatment outcomes were followed for six to 37 months with an average of 14.11 months. Results Baseline visual acuity ranged from hand movement to 0.8 with an average of 0.28. Among 11 eyes, six presented mild to moderate vitritis, five presented as retinal vein occlusion with no obvious vitirits. Fundus examination showed six cases with retinal hemorrhage, four cases with macular edema, two with macular epiretinal membrane, and two with vitreous hemorrhage. FFA revealed 11 cases with leakage of vessels, 11 with nonperfusion area, four with macular edema, three with retinal neovascularization, and two with choroidal lesions. OCT of nine eyes suggested six eyes with retinal edema, three with macular edema, three with macular epiretinal membrane. TST of seven patients were all b positive. T-SPOT.TB of four patients were all positive. Three of eight patients who had chest X-ray or chest CT were suggested tuberculosis infection. Four to six weeks after the start of anti-tuberculosis treatment, vitritis, exudates, retinal and macular edema subsided. During follow up, inflammation was stable with no recurrence observed. The visual acuity of last follow-up ranged from 0.15 to 0.8 with an average of 0.51. Conclusions The main presentations of presumed tubercular retinal vasculitis are vitritis, retinal vein occlusion, and retinal hemorrhage. Standard anti-tuberculosis treatment can improve inflammation and retinal hemorrhage.
Objective To observe the clinical characteristics of ocular albinism type 1 (OA1) in China.Methods Sixteen patients with OA1 and eight female carriers (eight OA1 patients and four carriers were from the same family) were enrolled in this study. All subjects were examined for corrected visual acuity, slit-lamp microscopy and GPR143 gene mutation detection. Some subjects also received indirect ophthalmoscopy, photography of anterior segment and ocular fundus, retinoscopy and optical coherence tomography (OCT). Iris pigmentation was divided into type A, B and C according to the above findings. Type A: slight pigmentation; type B: uneven pigmentation; type C: large patch of hypo-pigmentation with hippus. Result The corrected visual acuity of 16 OA1 patients was from 0.1 to 0.3. All the OA1 patients have bilateral horizontal nystagmus without strabismus. All eight subjects received retinoscopy have medium to low hypermetropia and astigmatism. Type A, B and C iris pigmentation were found in eight (50.0%), seven (43.7%) and one (6.3%) patients, respectively. Two (25.0%) carriers have Type A iris pigmentation, and other six carriers (75.0%) were normal. There is no typical albinism retinopathy, however macular foveal structures were never found in these patients. Four carriers have fundus striate or uneven hypo-pigmentation. The macular foveal structure of all the carriers was normal. The macular foveal structure was not found in three subjects who underwent examination of OCT. GPR143 gene mutation was found in all the OA1 patients (100.0%) and all the carriers.Conclusions The major clinical characteristics of Chinese OA1 patients are foveal hypoplasia and GPR143 gene mutation.