A retrospective quantitative cross-sectional study was conducted at the uveitis clinic of the Institute of Medicine by obtaining medical data from the medical record section on sarcoid uveitis cases visiting from March 2018 to March 2021. Demographic profile, ocular findings, laboratory findings and treatment details were documented and statistical analysis was done via Statistical Program for Social Science (SPSS) version 23. Out of 50 eyes of 30 patients included in the study; 66.6% patients (n=20) had bilateral and 33.3% (n=10) had unilateral ocular involvement. Anterior with intermediate uveitis (26.7%) was the most common type of uveitis among the cases. Serum angiotensin converting enzyme was raised in 66.7%, Chest X-ray showed hilar changes in 63.33%, and high-resolution computed tomography showed mediastinal, hilar lymphadenopathy with or without the involvement of the lung in 63.33% of patients. Sarcoid uveitis may have varied ocular presentations, the commonest being anterior and intermediate uveitis. The commonest complications are cataract and cystoid macular oedema, which are associated with vision loss. Steroids and immunomodulators are the mainstays of treatment.
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