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  • Title: Acute syphilitic posterior placoid chorioretinopathy presenting as atypical multiple evanescent white dot syndrome.
    Author: Azar G, Wolff B, Azam S, Mauget-Faÿsse M.
    Journal: Eur J Ophthalmol; 2021 Mar; 31(2):NP141-NP144. PubMed ID: 32878455.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: This paper reports the case of a young man who presented with syphilis masquerading as multiple evanescent white dots syndrome (MEWDS), which turned out to be an acute syphilitic posterior placoid chorioretinopathy (ASPPC) during follow-up. CASE PRESENTATION: A 59-year-old healthy male consulted for a three days' history of visual impairment in both eyes. On multimodal imaging, he was diagnosed as MEWDS. Fundus fluorescein angiography (FFA) showed early peripheral bilateral granular hyperfluorescence that correlated with the yellow-white dots found on fundus exam. Indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) depicted hypofluorescent dots on late phase. Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) revealed numerous inner retinal highly reflective deposits in the outer nuclear layer and disruption of the ellipsoid zone. After initial improvement, he presented again for a sudden visual loss at 3 weeks. FFA, ICGA and SD-OCT demonstrated the same but more numerous and outer lesions suggesting an ASPPC. A full inflammatory work-up revealed highly positive titers of rapid plasma regain (RPR) and fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption (FTA-Abs), suggesting a syphilis infection. The ophthalmological manifestations dramatically improved after the patient was admitted for high-dose intravenous penicillin G 24 million per day for 2 weeks. CONCLUSION: This is the first case that reports an ocular syphilitic infection masquerading as MEWDS at presentation and that turns to be an ASPPC. Syphilis serology should be routinely done in every case of atypical MEWDS especially when unusually presented in a young healthy man, with bilateral involvement and a bad clinical evolution.
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