Necrotizing Herpetic Retinopathy: A Case of Delayed Acute Retinal Necrosis Presentation in a Patient With Uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus and Complications
Jacklyn Vainshtein, Dagny Zhu, Moisés Enghelberg, Michael Eden, Amanda Frugoli

TL;DR
A patient with uncontrolled diabetes and ARN experienced severe vision loss due to retinal detachment, highlighting the importance of early diagnosis.
Contribution
This case report highlights the rare interplay between uncontrolled diabetes, ARN, and retinal detachment, emphasizing the need for early diagnosis.
Findings
The patient presented with ARN and developed severe retinal detachment despite treatment.
Uncontrolled diabetes and tobacco use may have contributed to the patient's poor prognosis.
There is a lack of existing research on the combined effects of diabetes, ARN, and tobacco use.
Abstract
Necrotizing herpetic retinopathy is a term used to describe two similar yet different forms of retinopathy - acute retinal necrosis (ARN) and progressive outer retinal necrosis (PORN), which can both present similarly with eye pain and/or vision loss stemming from inflammatory and necrotic retinal changes caused by members of the Herpesviridae family. This case presentation involves a patient with ARN, which has a multifocal pathogenesis, creating diffuse necrosis that over time coalesces and increases the risk of rhegmatous retinal detachment. We report the case of a 56-year-old male with uncontrolled insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus complicated by retinopathy and heavy tobacco use who presented with nonspecific symptoms of left eye redness, burning ocular pain, and blurred vision with lateral field vision loss for two weeks. Thorough dilated fundus examination with retinal imaging…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcular Diseases and Behçet’s Syndrome · Herpesvirus Infections and Treatments · Cytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research
