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Patient Information: Articles:
Articles for Patients:
Uveitis
C.
Stephen Foster, M.D.
(German)
Uveitis is inflammation inside the eye, specifically affecting
one or more of the three parts of the eye that make up the uvea:
the iris (the colored part of the eye), the ciliary body (behind
the iris, responsible for manufacturing the fluid inside the eye)
and the choroid (the vascular lining tissue underneath the
retina). Problems associated with uveitis are relatively
under-appreciated by the general population and ophthalmologists
alike. Few people realize, for example, that the third leading
cause of blindness in this country is uveitis.
Approximately sixty different things can cause uveitis, and the
"detective work" involved in trying to discover what a
particular patients cause for their uveitis is may be
extremely tedious and costly. This "detective work" is
much more like diagnostic work involved in internal medicine than
like the typical work involved in the practice of ophthalmology.
Primarily for this reason, few ophthalmologists choose to
specialize in uveitis. Additionally, the care of some forms of
uveitis requires the use of systemic medications (nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs, steroids, and/or immunomodulators,
"chemotherapy.") This too, dissuades many
ophthalmologists from the practical care of patients with
uveitis. There are, however, several centers around the United
States specializing in the care with patients with this potential
blinding problem. Additionally, increasing numbers of younger
ophthalmologists are spending time, after completing their
training in ophthalmology, getting specialty training so that
they may care for patients with uveitis.
Both infectious and non-infectious as well as malignant causes
for uveitis are represented in the spectrum of patients cared for
at the specialized centers. Clearly, then, "getting to the
bottom of it," and definitively identifying the cause of the
uveitis is quite critical, since proper choice of treatment is so
dependent on the underlying cause; the proper treatment for one
cause would in many instances frankly be deleterious in the care
of patients with uveitis from another cause.
Uveitis on the basis of autoimmunity (see last months
educational section) is the most common form of uveitis. This
uveitis tends to be recurrent. We employ a "stepladder"
approach to the care of our patients with autoimmune uveitis,
generally beginning with steroid drops, advancing to steroid
injections and/or pills, adding an oral non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory medication, and culminating in the use of an
immunomodulatory, chemotherapeutic drug if the patients
uveitis continues or continues to recur each time the steroid
medications are tapered and stopped. The reason for our
philosophy on this point of a limit of total amount of steroid
used stems from the fact that so many potentially avoidable
complications occur with open ended use of steroids.
Additionally, we have a philosophy of a complete intolerance to
continued recurrences or the continuance of "low grade"
inflammation in the eye. This philosophy is born of twenty-one
years of experience here in seeing the consequences of allowing
such recurrences or of allowing such "low grade"
inflammation to persist: slow but inevitable damage to the eye
such that vision is progressively lost.
We believe that, as more physicians recognize the lack of
progress in reducing blindness secondary to uveitis over the past
forty years, they will increasingly abandon the old attitudes of
treating this disorder and will embrace a new philosophy of a
zero tolerance model for inflammation and will employ a step
ladder algorithm in their treatment approach to patients with
uveitis.
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