acyclovir and Vitreoretinopathy--Proliferative

acyclovir has been researched along with Vitreoretinopathy--Proliferative* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for acyclovir and Vitreoretinopathy--Proliferative

ArticleYear
[Acute retinal necrosis: clinical presentation, treatment, and prognosis in a series of 22 patients].
    Journal francais d'ophtalmologie, 2004, Volume: 27, Issue:1

    To evaluate the clinical outcome and medical management in a series of patients diagnosed with acute retinal necrosis.. Between 1993 and 2000, 22 patients suffering from acute retinal necrosis were referred to our department. We retrospectively reviewed the clinical course, delay between diagnosis and first clinical manifestation, biological profiles, treatment and complications.. All patients had vitreous inflammation; retinitis was seen upon examination in 82% of the cases. Nevertheless, for six patients (27% of the cases), failure to recognize the diagnosis led to delay (mean, 5.5 days) between the first ophthalmological examination and antiviral therapy. Nineteen patients underwent laboratory evaluation, and virological diagnosis was made in 16 of them: varicella zoster virus was found in 11 cases, herpes simplex type 1 in three cases, and herpes simplex type 2 and cytomegalovirus in one case each. Nine patients were treated with a combination of aciclovir and foscarnet and 13 with aciclovir alone. Among the 16 patients who received aciclovir, one did not respond to therapy after 2 days and was cured only after foscarnet was added. Recurrence occurred at the end of treatment in only one patient. Retinal detachment complicated the course for 11 patients and was always associated with proliferative vitreoretinopathy. Among those, seven of the ten patients who accepted surgery were successfully treated. Eleven out of 22 patients had a final visual acuity up to 20/200 and two up to 20/40.. In our series, acyclovir alone was sufficient to cure the majority of cases. Even with antiviral therapy, the prognosis of acute retinal necrosis remains poor. Retinal detachment is the main complication.

    Topics: Acyclovir; Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Antiviral Agents; Cytomegalovirus Retinitis; Drug Therapy, Combination; Eye Infections, Viral; Female; Foscarnet; Herpes Simplex; Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus; Humans; Infant; Male; Middle Aged; Prognosis; Retinal Detachment; Retinal Necrosis Syndrome, Acute; Retrospective Studies; Visual Acuity; Vitreoretinopathy, Proliferative

2004