Bacterial Blight - TB & Syphilis Eyes
- Ocular Tuberculosis (TB):
- Most common: Posterior uveitis (choroiditis, retinal vasculitis).
- Choroidal tubercles: Creamy-yellow, deep lesions; may be single or multiple.
- Eales disease: Peripheral retinal periphlebitis, often bilateral; associated with tuberculoprotein hypersensitivity.
- Phlyctenular keratoconjunctivitis: Type IV hypersensitivity reaction.
- Treatment: Standard Anti-Tubercular Therapy (ATT) + Corticosteroids (for inflammation).
- Ocular Syphilis ("The Great Imitator"):
- Most common: Uveitis (anterior, intermediate, posterior, or panuveitis).
- Congenital: "Salt & pepper" fundus, interstitial keratitis (Hutchinson's triad component).
- Neurosyphilis: Argyll Robertson pupil.
- Acquired: Interstitial keratitis, chorioretinitis, optic neuritis.
- Treatment: Penicillin (dosage varies by stage and neurosyphilis presence).

⭐ Argyll Robertson pupil (ARP) in neurosyphilis: Characterized by Light-Near Dissociation. 📌 Mnemonic: ARP - Accommodation Reflex Present, Pupillary (Light) Reflex Absent ("Prostitute's Pupil" - accommodates but doesn't react).
Viral Visions - HIV & Herpes Hits
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HIV/AIDS:
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CMV Retinitis:
- Most common opportunistic ocular infection. CD4 < 50 cells/µL (high risk), < 100 (moderate risk).
- Fundus: "Cottage cheese & ketchup" or "pizza pie" appearance (hemorrhages, yellow-white infiltrates).
- Progresses to retinal necrosis, detachment if untreated.
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HIV Retinopathy: Non-infectious microvasculopathy. Cotton wool spots, retinal hemorrhages. Common.
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Others: Kaposi sarcoma (eyelid/conjunctiva), Molluscum contagiosum, increased HZO risk.
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Herpes Viruses:
- HSV: Keratitis (dendritic ulcer 📌 pathognomonic), uveitis, Acute Retinal Necrosis (ARN).
- VZV (HZO): Hutchinson's sign 📌 (vesicles on nose tip/side) strongly predicts ocular involvement. Keratitis, uveitis, neuralgia.
⭐ CMV retinitis is the most common opportunistic ocular infection in AIDS, typically occurring when CD4 count < 50 cells/µL.
Fungal Focus - Mucor & Candida Chaos
- Mucormycosis (Zygomycosis)
- Risks: Diabetes (esp. DKA), immunosuppression, deferoxamine therapy, trauma.
- Key Presentation: Rhino-orbital-cerebral mucormycosis (ROCM) is most common; look for black necrotic eschar (nasal/palatal), proptosis, ophthalmoplegia, facial pain/numbness, vision loss.
- Microscopy: Broad, non-septate (aseptate) hyphae with wide-angle (often 90°) branching.
- Management: Urgent surgical debridement + systemic IV Amphotericin B (liposomal preferred).

- Candida Infections
- Risks: IV drug use, indwelling catheters, TPN, broad-spectrum antibiotics, immunosuppression, recent major surgery.
- Ocular: Endogenous endophthalmitis; chorioretinitis presenting as fluffy, white, deep retinal or subretinal lesions (“cotton ball” opacities), often with vitritis.
- Management: Systemic antifungals (e.g., Fluconazole, Voriconazole); intravitreal antifungals (Amphotericin B or Voriconazole) for significant vitritis/endophthalmitis.
⭐ Rhino-orbital-cerebral mucormycosis (ROCM) is an aggressive, life-threatening fungal infection often seen in diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) patients, characterized by black necrotic eschar in the nasal cavity or palate and rapid progression if untreated.
Parasite Plight - Toxo & Cystic Curses
- Ocular Toxoplasmosis: Toxoplasma gondii infection.
- Key: Necrotizing chorioretinitis.
- Active: "Headlight in fog" (vitritis, fluffy lesion).
- Inactive: Pigmented scar; satellite lesions common.
- Congenital (common): 📌 Sabin's triad (chorioretinitis, hydrocephalus, intracranial calcifications).
- Diagnosis: Clinical; serology (IgG/IgM), PCR (aqueous/vitreous).
- Rx: Triple therapy (Pyrimethamine + Sulfadiazine + Corticosteroids).
- Key: Necrotizing chorioretinitis.
- Ocular Cysticercosis: Taenia solium larvae (Cysticercus cellulosae).
- Sites: Subretinal (most common), vitreous, anterior chamber, orbit.
- Intraocular: Translucent cyst ± visible scolex.
- Orbital: Proptosis, diplopia, myositis.
- Diagnosis: Clinical, B-scan, CT/MRI (co-existing neurocysticercosis).
- Rx: Surgery (intraocular); Albendazole + steroids (orbital/adjunct).

⭐ In ocular toxoplasmosis, reactivation often occurs at the border of an old pigmented scar, leading to a satellite lesion.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Tuberculosis commonly causes choroidal tubercles and uveitis; Eales disease is a sequela.
- Leprosy features madarosis, lagophthalmos, corneal anesthesia, and iris pearls.
- Syphilis ("great masquerader") can cause interstitial keratitis (congenital) and Argyll Robertson pupil.
- CMV retinitis ("pizza pie" appearance) is key in AIDS (CD4 <50).
- Toxoplasmosis presents as focal necrotizing retinochoroiditis ("headlight in fog").
- Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus shows Hutchinson's sign, indicating higher risk of ocular involvement.
- Dengue fever can lead to maculopathy and retinal hemorrhages.
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