Disease | vasculitis |
Phenotype | C0008526|choroiditis |
Sentences | 6 |
PubMedID- 20149341 | Patients were monitored for the presence of types of keratic precipitates (mutton fat or fine), posterior synechiae (broad based or filiform), iris nodules, snowballs, snow banking, vasculitis (with or without choroiditis), serpiginous-like choroiditis, and other types of posterior uveitis (choroidal abscess, retinochoroiditis, or exudative retinal detachment) which were compared between the 2 groups. |
PubMedID- 21475653 | In our experience, retinal vasculitis with or without choroiditis in patients with latent/manifest tuberculosis is a strong clinical predictor of tubercular uveitis [8]. |
PubMedID- 21823934 | Presumed tubercular retinal vasculitis with serpiginous-like choroiditis in the other eye. |
PubMedID- 22302066 | Current clinical practice involves diagnosing tau by using a positive tst and suggestive clinical signs such as broad-based posterior synechiae, retinal vasculitis with or without choroiditis, and serpiginous-like choroiditis.14 our study found that adding t-spot.tb increases the discrimination and accuracy of diagnosing tau. |
PubMedID- 25949841 | Histopathological evaluation of the specimen revealed granulomatous choroiditis with necrotizing vasculitis with infiltrates of inflammatory cells (figure 4). |
PubMedID- 23450761 | Pointers to tuberculous uveitis include bilaterality, broad-based posterior synechiae, retinal vasculitis with or without choroiditis, and serpiginous-like choroiditis in patients with latent or manifest tuberculosis in tuberculosis-endemic areas.7 other considerations include presence of multifocal choroidal tubercles and subretinal abscess. |
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