Tuberculosis: A Cunning Disease Presenting with Endopericarditis- Associated Bilateral Uveitis
Gholam Hossein Yaghoubi, Farshid Abedi, Masoud Ziaee, Amir Norouzpour
Turkish Journal of Ophthalmology · 2019-12
Abstract
Mycobacterium tuberculosis can spread through the entire body but rarely involves the eye. We report a patient with endophthalmitis in one eye and simultaneous retinal vasculitis in the fellow eye. Systemic work-up suggested infective endopericarditis. Polymerase chain reaction analyses of the vitreous and pericardial fluid were positive for M. tuberculosis. We initiated a four-drug antituberculous treatment regimen (isoniazid, ethambutol, pyrazinamide, and rifampin). After two weeks, we discontinued all the medications due to drug-induced hepatitis. We restarted isoniazid and rifampin, but hepatitis recurred. Finally, we chose isoniazid/ethambutol combination for 18 months, and also administered short-term systemic corticosteroid. His vision improved considerably with no recurrence of hepatitis or tuberculosis for 3 years after completion of treatment. Ocular tuberculosis can masquerade as other causes of intraocular inflammation, and a medical team consisting of an ophthalmologist and an infectious disease specialist might be needed for the diagnosis and management.
MeSH terms
- Ethambutol
- Medicine
- Pyrazinamide
- Isoniazid
- Tuberculosis
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Rifampicin
- Uveitis
- Hepatitis
- Retinal vasculitis
- Regimen
- Endophthalmitis
- Surgery
- Rifapentine
- Dermatology
- Internal medicine
- Disease
- Latent tuberculosis