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Rheumatoid arthritis. Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome. Sarcoidosis. Scleroderma. Systemic lupus erythematosus. Temporal arteritis. Relapsing polychondritis. Granulomatosis with polyangiitis 50-60% have ophthalmologic manifestations, which can be a presenting feature in a minority of patients.
H15-H22 Disorders of sclera, cornea, iris and ciliary body. (H15.0) Scleritis — a painful inflammation of the sclera. (H16) Keratitis — inflammation of the cornea. (H16.0) Corneal ulcer / Corneal abrasion — loss of the surface epithelial layer of the eye's cornea. (H16.1) Snow blindness / Arc eye — a painful condition caused by exposure ...
Sympathetic ophthalmia ( SO ), also called spared eye injury, is a diffuse granulomatous inflammation of the uveal layer of both eyes following trauma to one eye. It can leave the affected person completely blind. Symptoms may develop from days to several years after a penetrating eye injury. It typically results from a delayed hypersensitivity ...
Vision disorder. Disability-adjusted life year for vision disorders (age-related) per 100,000 inhabitants in 2002. [1] A vision disorder is an impairment of the sense of vision . Vision disorder is not the same as an eye disease. Although many vision disorders do have their immediate cause in the eye, there are many other causes that may occur ...
Christmas eye. Chronic relapsing inflammatory optic neuropathy. Closed-eye hallucination. Cogan syndrome. Coloboma. Coloboma of optic nerve. Computer vision syndrome. Congenital hypertrophy of the retinal pigment epithelium. Congenital stationary night blindness.
Users of two types of eye drops are being warned to stop using them because the FDA said they may contain bacterial and fungal contamination. FDA issues alert on 2 eye drops that tested positive ...
Earlier in the week, the FDA said that people should “properly discard” the products if they have purchased them and said: “Using contaminated eye drops could result in minor to serious ...
Duane syndrome is a congenital rare type of strabismus most commonly characterized by the inability of the eye to move outward. The syndrome was first described by ophthalmologists Jakob Stilling (1887) and Siegmund Türk (1896), and subsequently named after Alexander Duane, who discussed the disorder in more detail in 1905. [ 2]