ISSN: 2476-2075

Optometry: Open Access
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  • Review   
  • Optom Open Access 2022, Vol 7(4): 171
  • DOI: 10.4172/2476-2075.1000171

Visual Dysfunction System and Human deficiency Virus

Zhou Yangling*
Department of Ophthalmology, Mayo College of Medicine, Jacksonville, FL, USA
*Corresponding Author : Zhou Yangling, Department of Ophthalmology, Mayo College of Medicine, Jacksonville, FL, USA, Email: Zhouyang@edu.org

Received Date: Jul 04, 2022 / Published Date: Jul 31, 2022

Abstract

During the first 15 years of the AIDS epidemic patients experienced a high incidence of blindness due to cytomegalovirus (CMV) retinitis and other severe ocular opportunistic infections. Highly active anti-retroviral therapy, introduced in 1996, dramatically decreased the incidence of CMV retinitis. Though CMV retinitis still causes 40% of vision loss in AIDS patients, other conditions such as immune reconstitution uveitis, cataracts, and a significant other category -which most investigators believe is directly due to HIV - comprise the majority of cases. HIV causes vascular abnormalities of the conjunctiva and retina in the majority of AIDS patients, as well as retinitis, anterior and posterior uveitis and vasculitis. HIV frequently causes an optic neuropathy and is responsible for the majority of eye movement disorders among HIV patients. Physicians need to be aware that these problems may be the initial manifestation of HIV infections or a sign of highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART) failure. Therefore, patients with identifiable risk factors for AIDS who present with ophthalmologic conditions of unknown etiology should be considered for HIV testing. Finally, anti-retroviral therapy has been reported to cause asymptomatic deposits as well as degenerative conditions of both the anterior and posterior segments of the eye.

Keywords: Uveitis, HIV retinopathy, Neuroretinal disorder, Neuroretinitis

Citation: Yangling Z (2022) Visual Dysfunction System and Human deficiency Virus. Optom Open Access 7: 171. Doi: 10.4172/2476-2075.1000171

Copyright: © 2022 Yangling Z. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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