Main Article Content

Authors

Soma Rani Roy
Sujit Kumar Biswas

Abstract

A 52-year-old woman with bronchial asthma, frequent sneezing, and a skin lesion has suddenly developed poor vision for 15 days in the left eye. Her presenting vision was 6/18 and perception of light was positive in the right and left eyes, respectively, with mild pallor in the right optic disc and disc swelling in the left eye. She had a high eosinophil count, positive ANCA, and a skin biopsy in favor of Churg-Strauss disease. The patient was diagnosed with left optic neuropathy as a result of arteritis, which is a component of Churg-Strauss syndrome (CSS), and was treated with Inj. Methylprednisolone pulse therapy, followed by oral prednisolone but preceded to no perception of light in the left eye after 7 days of follow-up. Although CSS is a rare disease, routine checkup by an ophthalmologist can save vision and identify the high-risk group for proper referral to prevent unwanted morbidity and mortality.

Share This Article On Social Media
Usage Statistics

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Details

Section
Case study