Aim: To report a patient with multiple evanescent white dot syndrome (MEWDS) complicated by iridocyclitis and vitritis. Case description: A 70-year-old woman developed multiple subretinal white dots, iritis, and diffuse vitreous opacity. Angiographic and macular morphological features were consistent with those of MEWDS. Inflammatory findings including the white dots improved following only topical dexamethasone within 1 month after the initial visit. Best-corrected visual acuity recovered to 1.0 with restored photoreceptor structure. Conclusion: The presence of iridocyclitis and vitritis, atypical to MEWDS, indicates the concurrent development of panuveitis associated with MEWDS. These results suggest that MEWDS is a clinical entity of uveitis.
CITATION STYLE
Mizuuchi, K., Saito, W., Namba, K., & Ishida, S. (2020). Multiple evanescent white dot syndrome and panuveitis: a case report. Journal of Ophthalmic Inflammation and Infection, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12348-020-00221-3
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