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Show IGurnal of Clillical Ncuro- ol'hthallllology 12( 1): 37- 40, 1992 Herpes Zoster Ophthalmiclis Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy and Acyclovir F.- X. Borruat, M. D. and C. P. Herbort, M. D. ' i 1992 Raven Press, Ltd., New York A healthy 56- year- old man developed left- sided herpes zoster ophthalmicus, accompanied initially by ipsilateral anterior uveitis and increased intraocular pressure. Although he was treated in the subacute phase ( 5 days after skin eruption) with adequate oral doses of acyclovir for 10 days, the condition was later complicated by a left sectorial anterior ischemic optic neuropathy. The pathogenesis of this rare complication is discussed in this article. Key Words: Acyclovir- Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy- Herpes zoster ophthalmicus. From the Hopital Ophtalmique Jules Gonin, University Eye Clinic of Lausanne, Avenue de France 15, 1004 Lausanne, SWItzerland. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. F.- X. Borruat, Hopital Ophtalmique Jules Gonm, Umverslty Eye Clinic of Lausanne, Avenue de France 15, 1004 Lausanne, SWItzerland. 37 Optic neuropathy is a rare, but severe, complication of herpes zoster ophthalmicus ( HZO) ( 1,2). Papillitis ( 3- 5), retrobulbar neuritis ( 6- 12), optic atrophy ( 13), and neuroretinitis ( 14,15), have been described. Most of the reported patients were isolated cases, but the approximate frequency of HZO- related optic neuropathies in six different studies is 1' 7c ( 6 in 579 cases) ( 9,11- 13,16,17). Both primary inflammatory damage to the nerve and secondary ischemic mechanisms have been cited as responsible for its pathogenesis ( 1,2,18). Systemic acyclovir ( ACV) is now a wellestablished treatment of HZO. It reduces the amount and severity of ocular complications when applied at adequate doses within 3 days of cutaneous eruption ( 19,20). We report on a patient with typical HZO who was treated with oral ACV 5 days after onset and developed anterior ischemic optic neuropathy ( AION). To our knowledge, typical sectorial AION secondary to HZO in an immune- competent patient has not been previously described. CASE REPORT An otherwise healthy 56- year- old man presented with a 7- day history of left ocular pain. Five days before his initial visit, red skin lesions appeared around the left eyebrow. He reported having had an attack of right HZO a few years ago without complications. An examination revealed crusted skin lesions in the dermatome of the ophthalmic division of the left trigeminal nerve. Vision was 20/ 15 in both eyes. An examination of the right eye was unremarkable, but the left eye showed keratic precipitates, anterior uveitis ( 2 + cells) with intraocular pressure increased to 32 mmHg. Despite the presence of vesicles for more than 3 days, oral ACV 5x 800 mg/ day for 10 days was started, and local treat- 38 F.- X. BORRUAT AND C. P. HERBORT ment included ACV ointment 5 x / day, scopolamine 0.25% 3x/ day, and timolol 0.5% 2x / day. Twenty- seven days later ( 17 days after treatment cessation), the patient experienced a sudden and painless loss of vision in his left eye. Vision decreased to 20/ 200, and the anterior segment was unremarkable, with a clear anterior chamber and intraocular pressure of 14 mmHg. A fundus examination revealed prominent optic disc edema with capillary dilation and an inferior splinter hemorrhage ( Fig. 1). Fluorescein angiography was performed and showed early temporal superior hypofluorescence ( Fig. 2, between arrows) with late diffuse staining, compatible with a sectorial AION. Goldmann perimetry ( Fig. 3) showed an absolute visual field loss corresponding to the sector of disc ischemia. Ocular motility was normal. An examination of the right eye was unremarkable with a visual acuity of 20/ 15. An extensive medical and neurologic examination failed to reveal any abnormality. The patient, a nonsmoker, showed no evidence of cardiovascular disorder. Arterial blood pressure was 125/ 80 mmHg. A cerebral computed tomography ( CT) scan was normal. Neck and transcranial Doppler studies failed to show any arterial stenosis, and flow in the ophthalmic artery was normal on both sides. Blood examination showed erythrocyte sedimentation rate, 7 mrn/ h; hemoglobin, 156 gIl; hematocrit, 46%; platelets, 275 g/ I; leukocytes, 10.1 G. 1. Left optic nerve swelling with capillary dilation and splinter hemorrhage. FIG. 2. Fluorescein angiography intermediate phase, left eye: hypofluorescent superior optic disc ( between arrows), diffuse staining of the remaining optic disc, more pronounced temporally. gil ( neutrophils 72%, lymphocytes 23%, monocytes 5%); negative human immunodeficiency virus ( HIV); glucose, 5.23 mmol/ l; total plasma proteins 74 gIl. Cerebrospinal fluid contained slightly raised protein ( 635 mgll; normal: < 410 mg/ l), which is a frequent finding in HZO ( 3,18). Oral prednisone was started at 1 mglkg/ day and then tapered over 1 month. There was gradual resorption of the disc edema with temporal superior sectorial optic nerve atrophy. Visual acuity did not improve, and the visual field loss remained unchanged. FIG. 3. Goldmann perimetry, left eye: absolute loss in the nasal inferior Visual field. HERPES ZOSTER OPHTHALMICUS 39 DISCUSSION Herpes zoster ophthalmicus is caused by the reactivation of the varicella- zoster virus ( VZV), which has remained latent in the Gasserian ganglion since the patient's primary infection. The reactivation of V2V is associated with a depression of the cellular- mediated immunity ( 21). Such an immunological depression is more common in elderly patients, as assessed by the lymphocytetransformation test or by the skin test reactivity ( 21,22). Recurrences of H20 are frequent in immunocompromised hosts, but can surface in otherwise healthy patients. Hope- Simpson reported the frequency of a second attack of herpes zoster to be as common in patients with a previous episode of zoster as first attacks were in the general population ( 9 recurrences in 192 patients with previous zoster; 192 cases of zoster in 3,500 patients ( 23)). Optic neuropathies are rare complications of HZO, probably occurring in less than 1% of all HZO cases ( 9,11- 13,16,17). Whether anterior or posterior, the evolution and prognosis of VZVinduced optic neuropathies is unpredictable. Some patients have good visual recovery, and others experience poor or no visual improvement with or without treatment, depending on the severity and the type of tissue injury- ischemic or demyelinating ( 24). A sudden, painless visual loss occurred 32 days after the onset of H20 in our patient despite a lO- day course of ACV at an adequate dosage but started late ( 5 days after skin eruption). The clinical presentation as well as the results of fluorescein angiography were typical of AION, possibly caused by either a thrombosis or an arteritis involving the short posterior ciliary arteries. Ipsilateral cerebral ischemia is a well- recognized complication of H20 ( 25) and was found to appear at an average of 31 days following the onset of H20 in a review of 36 patients ( 26). Pathology data on lethal cases of H20 complicated by contralateral hemiplegia revealed segmental granulomatous angiitis ( 27,28). In these patients, V2V antigens were found within the media of ipsilateral cerebral vessels innervated by the trigeminal nerve, suggesting an immunological process involving the formation of tissular immune complexes. Recent ocular pathology studies of H20 are lacking because of the generally good prognosis that has developed with the advent of acyclovir treatment ( 19). In 1968, Naumann et al. reported on pathology data from 21 eyes of H20 patients ( 29). These eyes were enucleated 7 days to 8 years after the onset of HZO because of pain, phthisis bulbi, or corneal ulceration. Posterior ciliary perineural and intraneural as well as vascular and perivascular lymphocytic infiltration was a prominent feature ( 18 of 21 cases) and was frequently found to be segmental. It is interesting that the eye of a 71- year- old woman, enucleated 5 weeks after the onset of H20, showed a posterior ciliary granulomatous arteritis and a granulomatous choroiditis, features indeed very similar to H20- related cerebral vasculitis. The fact that perineural and perivascular inflammation was less pronounced in the early enucleated eye ( 7 days after H20 onset) than in 3 eyes enucleated later ( 5, 6, and 12 weeks after H20 onset) suggests that immunological processes are involved in the pathogenesis of H20. These pathological reports support the idea that AION in our case could be due to segmental posterior ciliary granulomatous arteritis. Reactivation of viral replication occurring at the end of ACV therapy is mostly unlikely in our patient, as this is the case only in severely immunocompromised patients, thus favoring the hypothesis of an immuneinduced arteritis. Acyclovir is an antiviral drug that is helpful in the acute phase of viral dissemination when direct viral invasion and replication occur ( 19). However, ACV is probably unable to influence secondary immunological processes. Treatment of H20 with a high dose of oral ACV ( 5 x 600- 800 mg/ day for at least 7 days) when given within 3 days of the cutaneous eruption drastically reduces the rate of severe ocular complications ( 19,20). Such treatment does not block the antibody titer rise against varicella- zoster virus ( 30). We recently showed that when given late, ACV does not reduce the rate of H20- related ocular complications ( 31). For our patient, delayed ACV therapy did not prevent a secondary complication, as AION appeared 32 days after the onset of H20, the same average time at which other cerebral complications were noted to appear ( 26). Acyclovir has only been recently introduced, and we are aware of only two other reports of H20- related optic neuropathies treated with ACV, both in HIV- positive patients ( 32,33). These patients had extensive ocular involvement ( uveitis, vitritis, retinitis, and optic neuropathy) probably as a result of massive viral invasion. Optic nerve involvement occurred in the acute infectious phase in both patients and was ascribed to direct viral involvement. There was a favorable outcome in one case with ACV therapy alone ( 33). In conclusion, because the type of late complication of H20 as seen in our patient is thought to I Clrn Neuro- ophthalmol. Vol. 12. No. 1. 1992 40 F.- X. BORRUAT AND C. P. HERBORT be immunological in nature, the recommended classical therapy is high- dose corticosteroids. The best prophylaxis, however, for severe HZOrelated complications is ACV therapy given early and in an adequate dose. REFERENCES 1. Ostler HB, Thygeson P. 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