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Case Reports
. 1996 Jul;114(7):834-40.
doi: 10.1001/archopht.1996.01100140048006.

Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome--associated herpes simplex virus retinitis. Clinical description and use of a polymerase chain reaction--based assay as a diagnostic tool

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Case Reports

Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome--associated herpes simplex virus retinitis. Clinical description and use of a polymerase chain reaction--based assay as a diagnostic tool

E T Cunningham Jr et al. Arch Ophthalmol. 1996 Jul.

Erratum in

  • Arch Ophthalmol 1997 Apr;115(4):559

Abstract

Objectives: To describe 2 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome who experienced a rapidly progressive, bilateral retinitis due to herpes simplex virus (HSV) (1 case due to HSV type 1 [HSV-1] and 1 case due to HSV type 2 [HSV-2] and to present a novel diagnostic polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based assay.

Methods: The presentation, clinical course, and diagnostic PCR-based assay used to make the diagnosis of HSV retinitis in 2 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome are described.

Results: Both patients experienced a rapidly progressive, bilateral retinal necrosis associated with intraretinal hemorrhages and a diffuse vasculitis. The PCR-based assays demonstrated HSV DNA in the vitreous specimens from the 2 patients. Restriction analysis on the amplified DNA showed HSV-1 in 1 patient and HSV-2 in the second patient. The diagnosis was supported in both patients by the occurrence of a herpes simplex-like encephalitis, and in 1 patient by a positive vitreous culture. The HSV-1-associated vasculitis affected primarily the retinal arterioles, with marked capillary dropout and occlusion of larger arcade vessels. In contrast, the HSV-2-associated vasculitis affected the retinal veins more than the arterioles, and was associated with an exudative retinal detachment.

Conclusions: To our knowledge, these are the first 2 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in whom HSV has been implicated as the sole cause of a rapidly progressing, necrotizing retinitis. Combined PCR and restriction analysis of vitreous samples from such patients is a useful and highly specific means of diagnosing HSV-1 and HSV-2 retinitis.

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