Uveitis
Uveitis is inflammation of the uvea, the pigmented layer of the eye between the inner retina and the outer fibrous layer composed of the sclera and cornea. The uvea consists of the middle layer of pigmented vascular structures of the eye and includes the iris, ciliary body, and choroid. Uveitis is described anatomically, by the part of the eye affected, as anterior, intermediate or posterior, or panuveitic if all parts are involved. Anterior uveitis is the most common, with the incidence of uveitis overall affecting approximately 1:4500, most commonly those between the ages of 20–60. Symptoms include eye pain, eye redness, floaters and blurred vision, and ophthalmic examination may show dilated ciliary blood vessels and the presence of cells in the anterior chamber. Uveitis may arise spontaneously, have a genetic component, or be associated with an autoimmune disease or infection. While the eye is a relatively protected environment, its immune mechanisms may be activated resulting in inflammation and tissue destruction associated with T-cell activation.
Uveitis is an ophthalmic emergency that requires urgent control of the inflammation to prevent vision loss. Treatment typically involves the use of topical eye drop steroids, intravitreal injection, newer biologics, and treating any underlying disease. While initial treatment is usually successful, complications include other ocular disorders, such as uveitic glaucoma, retinal detachment, optic nerve damage, cataracts, and in some cases, a permanent loss of vision. In the United States uveitis accounts for about 10–20% of cases of blindness.
Classification
Uveitis is classified anatomically into anterior, intermediate, posterior, and panuveitis forms—based on the part of the eye primarily affected. Before the twentieth century, uveitis was typically referred to in English as "ophthalmia."- Anterior uveitis includes iridocyclitis and iritis. Iritis is the inflammation of the anterior chamber and iris. Iridocyclitis is inflammation of the iris and ciliary body with inflammation predominantly confined to the ciliary body. Between 66% and 90% of uveitis cases are anterior in location. This condition can occur as a single episode and subside with proper treatment or may take on a recurrent or chronic nature.
- Intermediate uveitis, also known as pars planitis, consists of vitritis—which is inflammation of cells in the vitreous cavity, sometimes with snowbanking, or deposition of inflammatory material on the pars plana. There are also "snowballs," which are inflammatory cells in the vitreous.
- Posterior uveitis or chorioretinitis is the inflammation of the retina and choroid.
- Panuveitis is the inflammation of all layers of the uvea.
Signs and symptoms
Anterior uveitis (iritis)
- Pain in the eye
- Redness of the eye
- Blurred vision
- Photophobia
- Irregular pupil
- Signs of anterior uveitis include dilated ciliary vessels, presence of cells and flare in the anterior chamber, and keratic precipitates on the posterior surface of the cornea. In severe inflammation there may be evidence of a hypopyon. Old episodes of uveitis are identified by pigment deposits on lens, KPs, and festooned pupil on dilation of pupil.
- Busacca nodules, inflammatory nodules located on the surface of the iris in granulomatous forms of anterior uveitis such as Fuchs heterochromic iridocyclitis.
- Synechia, adhesion of the iris to the cornea or more commonly the lens
Intermediate uveitis
- Floaters, which are dark spots that float in the visual field
- Blurred vision
Posterior uveitis
Inflammation in the back of the eye is commonly characterized by:- Floaters
- Blurred vision
Causes
The most common form of uveitis is acute anterior uveitis. It is most commonly associated with HLA-B27, which has important features: HLA-B27 AAU can be associated with ocular inflammation alone or in association with systemic disease. HLA-B27 AAU has characteristic clinical features including male preponderance, unilateral alternating acute onset, a non-granulomatous appearance, and frequent recurrences, whereas HLA-B27 negative AAU has an equivalent male to female onset, bilateral chronic course, and more frequent granulomatous appearance. Rheumatoid arthritis is not uncommon in Asian countries as a significant association of uveitis.
Noninfectious or autoimmune causes
- Sympathetic ophthalmia
- Behçet disease
- Crohn's disease
- Fuchs heterochromic iridocyclitis
- Granulomatosis with polyangiitis
- HLA-B27 related uveitis
- Spondyloarthritis
- Juvenile idiopathic arthritis
- Sarcoidosis
- Tubulointerstitial nephritis and uveitis syndrome
Associated with systemic diseases
- Enthesitis
- Ankylosing spondylitis
- Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
- psoriatic arthritis
- reactive arthritis
- Behçet's disease
- inflammatory bowel disease
- Whipple's disease
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- polyarteritis nodosa
- Kawasaki's disease
- chronic granulomatous disease
- sarcoidosis
- multiple sclerosis
- Vogt–Koyanagi–Harada disease
Infectious causes
Drug-related side effects
- Rifabutin, a derivative of Rifampin, has been shown to cause uveitis.
- Several reports suggest the use of quinolones, especially Moxifloxacin, may lead to uveitis.
White dot syndromes
- acute posterior multifocal placoid pigment epitheliopathy
- birdshot chorioretinopathy
- multifocal choroiditis and panuveitis
- multiple evanescent white dot syndrome
- punctate inner choroiditis
- serpiginous choroiditis
- acute zonal occult outer retinopathy
Masquerade syndromes
- Non-neoplastic:
- Neoplastic:
Pathophysiology
Immunological factors
Onset of uveitis can broadly be described as a failure of the ocular immune system and the disease results from inflammation and tissue destruction. Uveitis is driven by the Th17 T cell sub-population that bear T-cell receptors specific for proteins found in the eye. These are often not deleted centrally whether due to ocular antigen not being presented in the thymus or a state of anergy is induced to prevent self targeting.Autoreactive T cells must normally be held in check by the suppressive environment produced by microglia and dendritic cells in the eye. These cells produce large amounts of TGF beta and other suppressive cytokines, including IL-10, to prevent damage to the eye by reducing inflammation and causing T cells to differentiate to inducible T reg cells. Innate immune stimulation by bacteria and cellular stress is normally suppressed by myeloid suppression while inducible Treg cells prevent activation and clonal expansion of the autoreactive Th1 and Th17 cells that possess potential to cause damage to the eye.
Whether through infection or other causes, this balance can be upset and autoreactive T cells allowed to proliferate and migrate to the eye. Upon entry to the eye, these cells may be returned to an inducible Treg state by the presence of IL-10 and TGF-beta from microglia. Failure of this mechanism leads to neutrophil and other leukocyte recruitment from the peripheral blood through IL-17 secretion. Tissue destruction is mediated by non-specific macrophage activation and the resulting cytokine cascades. Serum TNF-α is significantly elevated in cases while IL-6 and IL-8 are present in significantly higher quantities in the aqueous humour in patients with both quiescent and active uveitis. These are inflammatory markers that non-specifically activate local macrophages causing tissue damage.
Genetic factors
The cause of non-infectious uveitis is unknown but there are some strong genetic factors that predispose disease onset including HLA-B27 and the PTPN22 genotype.Infectious agents
Recent evidence has pointed to reactivation of herpes simplex, varicella zoster and other viruses as important causes of developing what was previously described as idiopathic anterior uveitis. Bacterial infection is another significant contributing factor in developing uveitis.Diagnosis
Uveitis is assessed as part of a dilated eye exam. Diagnosis includes dilated fundus examination to rule out posterior uveitis, which presents with white spots across the retina along with retinitis and vasculitis.Laboratory testing is usually used to diagnose specific underlying diseases, including rheumatologic tests and serology for infectious diseases.
Major histocompatibility antigen testing may be performed to investigate genetic susceptibility to uveitis. The most common antigens include HLA-B27, HLA-A29 and HLA-B51.
Radiology X-ray may be used to show coexisting arthritis and chest X-ray may be helpful in sarcoidosis.