1. Monocular Tuberculosis-Related Serpiginous-Like Choroiditis with Acute Posterior Multifocal Placoid Pigment Epitheliopathy-Like Presentation in a Danish Patient.
- Author
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Holm DL, Schneider M, and Klefter ON
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Visual Acuity, Denmark, Acute Disease, Glucocorticoids therapeutic use, Retinal Pigment Epithelium pathology, Prednisolone therapeutic use, Interferon-gamma Release Tests, Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolation & purification, White Dot Syndromes diagnosis, White Dot Syndromes drug therapy, Indocyanine Green administration & dosage, Fundus Oculi, Multifocal Choroiditis, Tuberculosis, Ocular diagnosis, Tuberculosis, Ocular drug therapy, Tuberculosis, Ocular microbiology, Fluorescein Angiography, Choroiditis diagnosis, Choroiditis drug therapy, Choroiditis microbiology, Tomography, Optical Coherence
- Abstract
Purpose: To report a case of tuberculosis-related serpiginous-like choroiditis (TB-SLC) in Denmark in a patient with few risk factors., Methods: Single case report., Results: A 54-year-old Caucasian male with no relevant travel history presented with unilateral light placoid confluent elements in the macula of the right eye with a best-corrected visual acuity of 0.2 Snellen. The left eye was normal. Wide-field Fluorescein and Indocyanine green-angiography were performed, and findings were consistent with acute posterior multifocal placoid pigment epitheliopathy. Since the condition was considered sight-threatening, and the patient had no recognizable risk factors for tuberculosis (TB), he was prescribed 50 mg of oral prednisolone. Blood tests and an X-ray were ordered to exclude infectious causes. The first interferon-ỿ release assay (IGRA) test was inconclusive and a new test was ordered. Over the following weeks new white dots appeared in the retina. After the patient had been treated for seven weeks with prednisolone, the second IGRA came back positive, and he was diagnosed with TB-SLC. Upon repeated questioning two months after baseline, the patient remembered that ten years ago he had been in a workplace with 50 different nationalities, and seven years ago he had been in contact with a friend who was treated for latent TB, thus supporting relevant exposure., Conclusion: TB-SLC may occur even in a patient with few recognizable risk factors and in a setting that is not TB endemic. It is imperative to continuously reassess differential diagnoses and initiate or repeat paraclinical testing in cases with atypical features.
- Published
- 2025
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