Definition and Clinical Features
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Neuroretinitis is characterized by optic disc edema with macular exudates in a star pattern, often unilateral, resulting from primary optic disc inflammation with secondary macular involvement.
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Key clinical findings: Optic disc edema, macular star (lipid-rich exudates in Henle’s layer), subretinal fluid, and sometimes chorioretinal white spots or vitreous cells.
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Subretinal fluid may precede macular star formation, caused by fluid passing through the external limiting membrane into the subretinal space.
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Fundus autofluorescence: Macular star appears hypoautofluorescent due to blockage of retinal pigment epithelium by exudates.
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Optical coherence tomography (OCT): Shows neurosensory retinal thickening, subretinal fluid, macular exudates, and flattening of the foveal contour. Spectral-domain OCT may reveal epipapillary infiltrates.
Etiologies
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Neuroretinitis is a descriptive term, not tied to a single cause, with etiologies divided into infectious, inflammatory, autoimmune, and mimickers (optic disc edema with macular star, ODEMS).
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Most common cause: Bartonella henselae (cat scratch disease, CSD), responsible for the majority of cases.
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Other infectious causes: Tuberculosis, syphilis, toxoplasmosis, Lyme disease, and viral infections (e.g., herpes viruses).
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Inflammatory causes: Sarcoidosis, Behçet’s disease, and idiopathic retinal vasculitis, aneurysms, and neuroretinitis (IRVAN) syndrome.
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Autoimmune causes: Associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors, post-COVID-19 vaccination, paraneoplastic syndromes, and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-associated disease (MOGAD).
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Mimickers (ODEMS): Hypertensive retinopathy, papilledema, anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (AION), epipapillary vitreous traction, optic disc tumors, and toxic optic neuropathies (e.g., from chemotherapy agents like bis-chlorethyl-nitrosourea).
Bartonella henselae (Cat Scratch Disease)
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Epidemiology: Incidence of CSD is 3–4 per 100,000 in the U.S., with 60% of cases in individuals under 18 years, highest risk in children aged 5–10.
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Transmission: Primarily via cat scratches or bites, with cat fleas (Ctenocephalides felis) as the main vector. Other vectors include ticks, biting flies, and possibly dogs.
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Pathogenesis: B. henselae is a fastidious, gram-negative, haemotropic bacillus that establishes intra-erythrocytic bacteremia. It uses type IV secretion systems to invade host cells, avoiding lysosomal degradation, and promotes angiogenesis via vascular endothelial growth factors.
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Ocular manifestations (5–10% of CSD cases):
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Most common: Optic disc edema (88% of cases), with 64% presenting with a macular star, 15% developing it later, and 21% without a macular star (cat scratch optic neuropathy, CSON).
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Other findings: Parinaud oculoglandular syndrome (follicular conjunctivitis with regional lymphadenopathy), focal/multifocal retinitis, choroiditis, uveitis, retinal vascular occlusions, and bacillary angiomatosis (more common in immunocompromised patients).
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Systemic symptoms (70% of neuroretinitis cases): Flu-like illness (67%), fever (28%), headaches (23%), and ocular pain (11%).
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Immunocompromised patients: More severe ocular findings (e.g., retinal bacillary angiomatosis, subretinal vascular masses) and systemic manifestations (e.g., culture-negative endocarditis, bacillary peliosis).
Diagnostic Evaluation
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History is critical: Inquire about cat exposure (especially kittens), recent travel, tick exposure, sexual history, and systemic symptoms (e.g., fever, lymphadenopathy, joint pain).
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Intravenous fluorescein angiography (IVFA): Shows late leakage from the optic disc vasculature, confirming proteinaceous leakage as the cause of macular exudates.
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OCT: Essential for documenting central macular thickness, retinal thickness, and subretinal fluid height, aiding in monitoring disease progression.
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Laboratory tests for B. henselae: Serology (IgM/IgG), polymerase chain reaction (PCR), or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to confirm CSD.
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Neuroimaging (MRI): May show optic nerve enhancement in B. henselae-associated neuroretinitis, helping differentiate it from other optic neuropathies.
Differential Diagnosis
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Hypertensive retinopathy: Bilateral, with cotton-wool spots, hemorrhages, and arteriolar attenuation.
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Papilledema: Bilateral, associated with enlarged blind spot and MRI findings of raised intracranial pressure.
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AION: Unilateral, with a small “disc-at-risk” in the fellow eye and systemic risk factors (e.g., hypertension, diabetes).
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Multiple sclerosis (MS): Unlikely to cause neuroretinitis, as MS targets the myelin sheath, not optic disc vasculature. Acute papillitis with a macular star is rare in MS.
Management
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B. henselae-associated neuroretinitis:
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Often self-limited in immunocompetent patients, resolving over weeks to months.
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Antibiotics (controversial benefit): Doxycycline (100 mg BID for 4–6 weeks) or azithromycin (500 mg on day 1, then 250 mg daily for 4 days) may be considered, especially in severe cases or immunocompromised patients.
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Corticosteroids: May be used adjunctively in severe cases with significant vision loss, but evidence is limited.
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Idiopathic recurrent neuroretinitis:
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Characterized by recurrent episodes with no identifiable cause.
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Treatment: Immunosuppressive therapy (e.g., corticosteroids, azathioprine) to reduce recurrence and preserve vision.
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Mimickers: Treat underlying cause (e.g., blood pressure control for hypertensive retinopathy, intracranial pressure management for papilledema).
Prognosis
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Immunocompetent patients: Generally benign, with most ocular manifestations resolving spontaneously.
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Immunocompromised patients: Higher risk of severe, vision-threatening complications requiring aggressive treatment.
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Recurrent idiopathic neuroretinitis: May lead to progressive visual loss due to repeated episodes.