TL;DR: It was concluded that different patterns of retinal vasculitis occur in different systemic inflammatory diseases, and that in isolated retinal Vasculitis there is a particular association between peripheral vascular sheathing, macular oedema, and diffuse capillary leakage.
Abstract: This paper describes the ophthalmological features of 150 patients with idiopathic retinal vasculitis, 67 of whom had isolated retinal vasculitis (RV) and 83 had RV associated with systemic inflammatory disease (RV + SID). The diagnosis of retinal vasculitis was made by ophthalmoscopy and fluorescein angiography, and patients with any identifiable cause (infection, ischaemia, or malignancy) were excluded from the study. Patients with isolated RV tended to have peripheral vascular sheathing, macular oedema, and diffuse capillary leakage. Those with RV accompanying Behcet's disease often had branch vein retinal occlusions and retinal infiltrates together with macular oedema and diffuse capillary leakage; the retinal infiltrates were pathognomonic for Behcet's disease. In sarcoidosis the retina typically showed features of periphlebitis associated with focal vascular leakage. Patients with uveomeningitis, multiple sclerosis, arthritis, or systemic vasculitis showed diffuse retinal capillary leakage associated with a mixture of the other features. Poor visual function was particularly associated with macular oedema and branch vein retinal occlusion, while the retina appeared to 'withstand' the impact of vascular sheathing, periphlebitis, or neovascularisation alone. Within the limitations of a point prevalence study it was concluded that different patterns of retinal vasculitis occur in different systemic inflammatory diseases, and that in isolated retinal vasculitis there is a particular association between peripheral vascular sheathing, macular oedema, and diffuse capillary leakage. In Part 2 we describe the results of examining the sera of these patients for the presence of antiretinal antibodies and circulating immune complexes.
TL;DR: Three previously healthy young patients who suffered acute visual loss associated with diffuse bilateral retinal periphlebitis developed thick, inflammatory infiltrates surrounding all of the retinal veins, creating the appearance of frosted tree branches.
TL;DR: Analysis of two cases and six other reported cases indicates that severe periphlebitis can evolve into occlusive peripheral vasculitis, which results in peripheral retinal neovascularization in patients with multiple sclerosis.
TL;DR: Eales' disease differed clearly from idiopathic periphlebitis in a predominance of male patients, a marked tendency toward bilateral disease in males, the aspect of vascular sheathing and the absence of inflammatory signs from the vitreous body.
Abstract: The clinical findings in 316 eyes with Eales' disease and 41 eyes with true idiopathic periphlebitis were analyzed. Eales' disease differed clearly from idiopathic periphlebitis in a predominance of male patients, a marked tendency toward bilateral disease in males, the aspect of vascular sheathing and the absence of inflammatory signs from the vitreous body. The clinical picture of Eales' disease was characterized by avascular areas in the retinal periphery, followed posteriorly by microaneurysms, rope-ladder-like dilations of capillary channels, tortuosity of neighbouring vessels and spontaneous chorioretinal scars. The more pronounced findings were neovascularizations (84%), hemorrhages (58%), obliterated vessels (39%) and vascular sheathing (34%). In contrast to idiopathic periphlebitis, Eales' disease is considered a primary, non-inflammatory disorder of the walls of the peripheral retinal vessels, namely the shunt vessels.
TL;DR: In an experimental primate (cynomolgus monkey) model of bacterial endophthalmitis, retinal periphlebitis developed early and closely resembled the clinical findings in humans.