Research Article

A Comparative Study of Characteristics and Outcomes of Patients with Proved and Suggested Sarcoid Uveitis Occurring after Ophthalmic Procedure

Table 1

Clinical, ophthalmic, radiologic, and histopathologic features of patients with postophthalmic procedure sarcoid uveitis.

Patient#SexAgeOphthalmic procedureUveitisSystemic involvementSarcoidosis diagnosis
TimelineUnilateral/OUAnatomical formGranulomatousVasculitisChoroiditisEdema

1F69Cataract1OUPan+MacularMSG, bronchial, gastric biopsies
2F76Cataract3 + 10OUPanMacularNegative
3F82Cataract12OUPan+Conjunctival noduleConjunctival nodule biopsy
4F31Preretinal haemorrhage + macular hole2OUPan++/+ERM + papilledemaMSG biopsy
5F67Glaucoma5OUPan+EIOP+MacularSicca syndrome + conjunctival nodule weight lossGastric biopsy
6F81Cataract1OUA/I+MacularDyspneaPositive 18FDG-PET
7F69Retinal detachment8UnilateralPan+Venous+Abad’s criteria
8F88Cataract + YAG capsulotomy1UnilateralI/P+MacularCoughBronchial biopsy
9F83Intravitreal aflibercept1UnilateralA+Negative
10F70Membrane peeling5UnilateralACoughLymph node fine needle aspiration
11F58YAG capsulotomy4UnilateralI/PMacular papilledemaConjunctival noduleConjunctival nodule biopsy

F = female, age in years, OU = both eyes, A = anterior, I = intermediate, P = posterior, Pan = panuveitis, EIOP = elevated intraocular pressure, ERM = epiretinal membrane, ADP = adenopathy, MSG = minor salivary glands, and 18FDG-PET = 18F-labelled deoxyglucose positron emission tomography.