Title of article :
Unilateral Blurred Vision as the Sole Presenting Symptom of Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
Author/Authors :
Sharma, Rajesh K. Department of Ophthalmology - University of Mississippi Medical Center - Jackson - MS - USA - Department of Neurology - University of Mississippi Medical Center - Jackson - MS - USA , Mays, Kevin Department of Ophthalmology - University of Mississippi Medical Center - Jackson - MS - USA
Pages :
4
From page :
109
To page :
112
Abstract :
Purpose: To describe a case of infiltrative optic neuropathy caused by chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Case Report: A 41-year-old white male presented with painless, blurry vision in the left eye. Examination revealed unilateral optic nerve swelling confirmed by optical coherence tomography (OCT). Initial workup revealed mild leukocytosis, eventually diagnosed as chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). No other cause of optic neuropathy was identified despite extensive investigation. The patient developed rapidly progressive retinal ganglion cell nerve fiber layer (NFL) atrophy and relative afferent pupillary defect (RAPD) of the left eye despite steroid treatment but stabilized after four cycles of CLLtargeted chemotherapy. Although infiltrative optic neuropathy is well-known in leukemia, presentation with only subtle vision loss is rare. Vision loss usually presents late in leukemic infiltrative optic neuropathy and therefore must be considered in patients with optic disc swelling and leukocytosis. Conclusion: When treating CLL, progressive visual decline with coexistent optic neuropathy may warrant chemotherapy.
Keywords :
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia , Optic Neuropathy
Journal title :
Journal of Ophthalmic and Vision Research
Serial Year :
2020
Record number :
2523015
Link To Document :
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