Endogenous Aspergillus Uveitis Following Heart Surgery
- 1 September 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Ophthalmology (1950)
- Vol. 78 (3) , 354-357
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archopht.1967.00980030356017
Abstract
ELEVEN cases of endogenous Aspergillus infection of the eye have been reported.1-11 In eight, the fungus was identified by histologic examination alone, supported in the other three by culture of Aspergillus from sputum,2 from pleural exudate at autopsy,9 and from a thoracotomy specimen during life as well as several organs at autopsy.11 Uveitis has also been reported in a patient with an Aspergillus abscess in the lung, but no pathologic examination of the eye was possible.12 This communication reports a case of intraocular aspergillosis following heart surgery in which uveitis was the presenting sign of endocarditis with septic embolism. Report of a Case This 40-year-old white woman underwent open-heart surgery June 10, 1966 at another hospital for replacement of her mitral valve, deformed by rheumatic heart disease, with a Starr-Edwards prosthesis. Postoperatively, she was maintained on anticoagulants warfarin sodium (Coumadin Sodium) and digoxin. She madeThis publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Endogenous Intraocular AspergillosisArchives of Ophthalmology (1950), 1966
- FUNGAL ENDOCARDITIS: REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE AND REPORT OF THREE CASESAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1958