TY - JOUR KW - Anterior Chamber KW - Anti-Bacterial Agents KW - Drug Therapy, Combination KW - Eye Enucleation KW - Eye Infections, Bacterial KW - Follow-Up Studies KW - Humans KW - Leprostatic Agents KW - Leprosy, lepromatous KW - Male KW - Middle Aged KW - Mycobacterium leprae KW - Recurrence KW - Sclera KW - Scleritis AU - Poon A AU - MacLean H AU - McKelvie P AB -

BACKGROUND: Recurrent immune-mediated scleritis after adequate treatment of leprosy is not well documented in the literature. We describe an Australian resident with unilateral intra-ocular lepromatous leprosy who had persistent non-infectious scleritis.

METHODS: A man of Anglo-Indian ancestry initially presented with lepromatous leprosy and unilateral ocular involvement. The affected eye had an interstitial keratitis and a granulomatous anterior uveitis that responded to antileprotics and anti-inflammatory agents. Despite systemic cure with triple antileprotic therapy, he developed recurrent scleritis that required multiple scleral patch grafts for scleral thinning and, subsequently, an enucleation. Histology failed to demonstrate persistent infection, rather a chronic non-granulomatous scleritis, which was probably immune mediated.

RESULTS/CONCLUSIONS: This case demonstrates an ocular complication of leprosy that is infrequently reported. Patients with ocular involvement by leprosy are at risk of developing recurrent scleritis despite systemic cure with antileprotics.

BT - Australian and New Zealand journal of ophthalmology C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9524032?dopt=Abstract DA - 1998 Feb IS - 1 J2 - Aust N Z J Ophthalmol LA - eng N2 -

BACKGROUND: Recurrent immune-mediated scleritis after adequate treatment of leprosy is not well documented in the literature. We describe an Australian resident with unilateral intra-ocular lepromatous leprosy who had persistent non-infectious scleritis.

METHODS: A man of Anglo-Indian ancestry initially presented with lepromatous leprosy and unilateral ocular involvement. The affected eye had an interstitial keratitis and a granulomatous anterior uveitis that responded to antileprotics and anti-inflammatory agents. Despite systemic cure with triple antileprotic therapy, he developed recurrent scleritis that required multiple scleral patch grafts for scleral thinning and, subsequently, an enucleation. Histology failed to demonstrate persistent infection, rather a chronic non-granulomatous scleritis, which was probably immune mediated.

RESULTS/CONCLUSIONS: This case demonstrates an ocular complication of leprosy that is infrequently reported. Patients with ocular involvement by leprosy are at risk of developing recurrent scleritis despite systemic cure with antileprotics.

PY - 1998 SP - 51 EP - 5 T2 - Australian and New Zealand journal of ophthalmology TI - Recurrent scleritis in lepromatous leprosy. VL - 26 SN - 0814-9763 ER -