Indian Journal of Transplantation (Jun 2024)

Two-Year Follow-up of Necrotic Herpetic Retinopathy in a Renal Transplant Recipient

  • Harish Sivagnanam,
  • P. K. Senthil Kumar,
  • Shankar Palaniselvam,
  • Ramasubramanian Viswanathan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/ijot.ijot_113_23
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 2
pp. 184 – 188

Abstract

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Visual disturbances are common in patients who received renal transplant. Visual acuity is reduced in 60% of renal transplant patients after 10-year posttransplant. The most common causes are cataracts, diabetic retinopathy, and hypertensive retinopathy. However, infectious causes of visual loss are rare and most commonly associated with cytomegalovirus and toxoplasmosis infections. Here, we report a 32-year-old male who developed visual loss 6 months after receiving a live-related kidney transplant. The patient had a history of varicella infection in the immediate posttransplant period. The visual loss was secondary to acute retinal necrosis probably secondary to a Varicella infection. This rare manifestation is even more unique in a posttransplant scenario which is usually associated with progressive outer retinal necrosis. The patient had developed irreversible visual loss secondary to the retinal necrosis. Here, we report this rare association as well as 2-year ophthalmological follow-up of this patient.

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