Abstract

To examine the ocular complications in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus(HIV) in Japan. The medical records of 322 patients seen at the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome(AIDS) Clinical Center from July 1, 1997 through December 31, 1998 were reviewed, and the HIV-associated ocular complications were correlated with serum CD 4+ T-lymphocyte counts. Ocular complications were found in 51 patients: 35 cases with retinal microvasculopathy, 17 cases with cytomegalovirus retinitis(9 quiescent, 6 active, and 2 recurrent), and 1 case each with tuberculous uveitis, phthisis bulbi after necrotizing herpetic retinopathy, conjunctival Kaposi's sarcoma, papilledema, divergence palsy, hemianopia, and abducens palsy. Retinal microvasculopathy was present in patients with CD 4+ T-lymphocyte counts above 500/mm3, but was more common in patients with cell counts below 200/mm3. Among 6 patients with active cytomegalovirus retinitis, 5 patients had a CD 4+ T-lymphocyte count below 50/mm3 at the onset of retinitis, while one patient developed retinitis after the cell count increased to over 200/mm3 with highly active antiretroviral therapy. Cytomegalovirus retinopathy may occur in patients with a CD 4+ T-lymphocyte count of more than 200/mm3.

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