A diagnosis of Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS) in a patient presenting with superficial keratitis.
American Journal of Ophthalmology Case Reports 2018 September
Purpose: To describe a case of Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) diagnosed in a patient presenting with primarily ocular findings where SJS had not been initially suspected.
Observations: A 23-year-old female presented with a 2 day history of bilateral eye pain, conjunctival injection, decreased visual acuity, and photophobia in the context of a 4 day history of fever, headache, and sore throat. She was found to have bilateral superficial keratitis and treated for suspected early infectious keratitis secondary to extended contact lens wear. She returned the next day with worsening visual symptoms, a new macular rash over her upper torso, and new ulcerating lesions over her buccal and perioral tissue. The patient was diagnosed with SJS. She was successfully treated using systemic cyclosporine with antibiotics and steroid eye drops.
Conclusions and importance: Ophthalmologists may be the first physicians to diagnose SJS, a life-threatening condition that can initially present with non-specific viral prodromal symptoms and ocular signs alone. This case emphasizes the importance of considering a patient's entire clinical history, especially when the presentation is atypical and the diagnosis is not obviously apparent.
Observations: A 23-year-old female presented with a 2 day history of bilateral eye pain, conjunctival injection, decreased visual acuity, and photophobia in the context of a 4 day history of fever, headache, and sore throat. She was found to have bilateral superficial keratitis and treated for suspected early infectious keratitis secondary to extended contact lens wear. She returned the next day with worsening visual symptoms, a new macular rash over her upper torso, and new ulcerating lesions over her buccal and perioral tissue. The patient was diagnosed with SJS. She was successfully treated using systemic cyclosporine with antibiotics and steroid eye drops.
Conclusions and importance: Ophthalmologists may be the first physicians to diagnose SJS, a life-threatening condition that can initially present with non-specific viral prodromal symptoms and ocular signs alone. This case emphasizes the importance of considering a patient's entire clinical history, especially when the presentation is atypical and the diagnosis is not obviously apparent.
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