Abstract

ABSTRACT Purpose: To describe an atypical case of sympathetic ophthalmia. Design: Case report. Results: A 37 -year-old female presented a 3-day long acute left retroocular pain and photophobia, 1 month after having undergone evisceration of the fellow eye. Upon exploration, the patient presented conjunctival injection, macular retinal folds with peripapillary subretinal fluid, and hypocyanescent choroidal spots on indocyanine green angiography. A sympathetic ophthalmia with a reactive posterior scleritis involvement was diagnosed. The patient underwent treatment with prednisone, mycophenolate, and cyclosporine with slowly tapering, presenting a total recovery over the years. Conclusion: Sympathetic ophthalmia may present itself atypically as ocular pain with little vision loss secondarily to a mild panuveitis with reactive scleral involvement.

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