Uveitis in children.
Fjalë kyçe
Abstrakt
Uveitis is diagnosed more often in adults than in children but in children the prevalence of chronic inflammation and the difficulty of an early diagnosis may worsen the visual prognosis. The different incidence of the presumed or defined etiologies in the various ages is probably responsible for the better classification of uveitis in childhood (71% versus 55% in adult patients). Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis is the most common identifiable etiology of pediatric anterior uveitis (28%). However, its long-term prognosis is not satisfactory and ophthalmic surveillance protocols are necessary especially for ANA and HLA DR11 positive girls with the pauci articular form of the disease. Intermediate uveitis is idiopathic in 98% of the cases and accounts for 20-26% of all pediatric uveitis; cystoid macular edema in these patients is the leading cause of visual impairment. Toxoplasmosis is the most frequent cause of posterior uveitis (43%) and of uveitis in childhood (12%); involvement is bilateral in 50-60% of cases. Diffuse uveitis forms are uncommon in children, but their course is particularly severe. They may either be the natural evolution of a posterior uveitis or the presenting sign of a systemic disease typical of the third decade of life, such as sarcoidosis, Behçet's disease, Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada's disease. Masquerade syndromes including retinoblastoma, leukemia and lymphoma, intraocular foreign body, retinitis pigmentosa may contribute to confusion in the differential diagnosis of inflammatory disease of the uveal tract in childhood.