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Sympathetic Ophthalmia

Seminars in Ophthalmology, 2005
Sympathetic ophthalmia is a rare, bilateral granulomatous uveitis that occurs after either surgical or accidental trauma to one eye. The ocular inflammation in the fellow eye becomes apparent usually within 3 months after injury. Clinical presentation is an insidious or acute anterior uveitis with mutton-fat keratic precipitates.
Francisco Max Damico, Lucy H Young
exaly   +3 more sources

Sympathetic ophthalmia

Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology, 2009
Sympathetic ophthalmia is a rare, bilateral granulomatous uveitis that occurs after either surgical or accidental trauma to one eye. The etiology is still not completely clear, but evidence suggests that sympathetic ophthalmia represents an autoimmune inflammatory response against choroidal melanocytes mediated by T cells.
U, Pleyer, M, Dutescu
exaly   +2 more sources

Florid sympathetic ophthalmia

Orbit, 2021
A 32 year-old male sustained a perforating firework-related open globe injury of his right eye, underwent an exploration and repair within twenty-four hours, and developed a bilateral granulomatous...
Vamsee K, Neerukonda   +2 more
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Sympathetic ophthalmia

Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology, 2008
Sympathetic ophthalmia (SO) is a rare, bilateral, non-necrotizing, granulomatous uveitis that occurs after ocular trauma or surgical procedures to one eye threatening sight in the fellow eye. The pathophysiology is not clearly understood, but it appears that the disrupted integrity of the inciting eye leads to an autoimmune hypersensitivity reaction ...
Claudia Patricia, Castiblanco   +1 more
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Sympathetic Ophthalmia

Seminars in Ophthalmology, 2011
Sympathetic ophthalmia is a rare, bilateral granulomatous panuveitis following accidental or surgical trauma to one eye. The pathophysiology is not clearly understood, but is believed to be a T-cell mediated autoimmune response. Clinical presentation most often occurs within the first year after trauma; anteriorly it manifests as a chronic or acute ...
Grace C, Chang, Lucy H, Young
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Sympathetic Ophthalmia

American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1981
A 29-year-old woman developed severe ocular manifestations of sympathetic ophthalmia on the day after enucleation of a blind, painful eye, and four weeks after a penetrating ocular injury. She was observed for one year with fundus photography, fluorescein angiography, and electrophysiologic tests. Nystagmus, a rare systemic manifestation of sympathetic
W B, Dreyer   +3 more
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Postoperative Sympathetic Ophthalmia

International Ophthalmology Clinics, 2000
Although uncommon, SO is a fearful postoperative complication because of its potential to blind both eyes. It can result not only from penetrating ocular surgery but also from nonpenetrating ocular procedures. Thus, it is important to consider in any patient who has undergone ocular surgery and develops bilateral uveitis, particularly because prompt ...
A T, Gasch   +3 more
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SYMPATHETIC OPHTHALMIA

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1952
THERE are certain diseases in all fields of medicine whose essential data have come to be more or less taken for granted. Sympathetic ophthalmia is one of these. Its existence, as Woods1pointed out in an excellent review of the whole subject, has been realized for almost a thousand years.
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