Frontiers in Medicine (Jun 2021)

Retinal Involvement in COVID-19: Results From a Prospective Retina Screening Program in the Acute and Convalescent Phase

  • Reema Bansal,
  • Ashish Markan,
  • Nitin Gautam,
  • Rashmi Ranjan Guru,
  • P. V. M. Lakshmi,
  • Deeksha Katoch,
  • Aniruddha Agarwal,
  • Mini P. Singh,
  • Vikas Suri,
  • Ritin Mohindra,
  • Neeru Sahni,
  • Ashish Bhalla,
  • Pankaj Malhotra,
  • Vishali Gupta,
  • G. D. Puri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.681942
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

Read online

Objective: To detect retinal involvement in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients in acute and convalescent phase by their fundus screening.Methods: In a prospective, cross-sectional, observational study (July–November 2020), 235 patients (142 acute and 93 convalescent phase) underwent fundus screening in a tertiary care center in North India. For convalescent phase, “hospitalized” patients (73) were screened at least 2 weeks after hospital discharge, and “home-isolated” patients (20) were screened 17 days after symptom onset/COVID-19 testing.Results: None in acute phase showed any retinal lesion that could be attributed exclusively to COVID-19. Five patients (5.38%) in convalescent phase had cotton wool spots (CWSs) with/without retinal hemorrhage, with no other retinal finding, and no visual symptoms, seen at a median of 30 days from COVID-19 diagnosis.Conclusions: CWSs (and retinal hemorrhages) were an incidental finding in COVID-19, detected only in the convalescent phase. These patients were much older (median age = 69 years) than the average age of our sample and had systemic comorbidities (diabetes mellitus, hypertension, etc.). We propose the term “COVID-19 retinopathy” to denote the presence of CWSs at the posterior pole, occasionally associated with intraretinal hemorrhages, in the absence of ocular inflammation in patients with a history of COVID-19 disease.

Keywords