Journal of Investigative Medicine High Impact Case Reports (Feb 2023)

A 13-Year-Old Girl With Unilateral Visual Changes

  • David A. W. Sykes AB,
  • Suzanna L. Joseph BS,
  • Shannon P. Williams DO,
  • Samrat U. Das MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23247096221150635
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Neuroretinitis is a condition typically characterized by unilateral optic neuropathy and is most commonly a sequelae of cat scratch disease (CSD) due to infection with Bartonella henselae . Ophthalmologic examination will reveal a swollen optic nerve and may eventually reveal a canonical macular star; optical coherence tomography (OCT) will reveal flattening of the fovea, a thickened neurosensory retina, and subretinal fluid accumulation. Although CSD rarely presents with isolated neuorretinitis, it should be considered in patients presenting with unilateral visual changes. The differential diagnosis for neuroretinitis includes optic neuritis, inflammatory optic neuropathies (sarcoid, para-infectious, autoimmune), compressive, toxic, and more. We describe a pediatric patient presenting with visual changes that were initially concerning for optic neuritis and the diagnostic workup that ultimately led to a diagnosis of CSD neuroretinitis.