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Ocular syphilis revisited: a review of cases and evidence from the literature

Ocular syphilis revisited: a review of cases and evidence from the literature
Ocular syphilis revisited: a review of cases and evidence from the literature
Aim: this case series seeks to share our experience with ocular syphilis by reporting the clinical findings and management of nine diagnosed cases.

Materials and methods: this retrospective case series comprises nine patients who presented to the Ophthalmology Department of Southampton General Hospital between 2013 and 2022. The series provides a comprehensive report on patients diagnosed with ocular syphilis, detailing the severity of the condition, associated symptoms, and the treatments administered.

Results: all cases in the study were diagnosed with syphilis based on ocular findings. The patients exhibited a wide range of visual acuity, from normal to as low as light perception vision, with corresponding posterior segment results and varied intraocular pressure data. Some patients had recently been diagnosed with co-infection involving the human immunodeficiency virus. Except for one patient who underwent intravenous ceftriaxone treatment, the majority received systemic therapy with intravenous benzylpenicillin. In four cases, prednisolone was administered in conjunction with the systemic treatment. For topical therapy, three patients were provided with cycloplegics and topical steroids to alleviate discomfort and prevent iris adhesions.

Conclusions: diagnosing ocular syphilis presents challenges, which emphasizes the value of excluding syphilis infection in patients exhibiting uveitis, optic nerve neuritis or atrophy, acute muscular palsy, or visual loss. Ocular syphilis warrants consideration during diagnosis, necessitates treatment akin to neurosyphilis, and mandates testing for other immunodeficiency diseases. Inadequate management may lead to persistent vision impairment.
2168-8184
Eissa, Mahmoud
da55bf55-0bb6-42d0-82b3-2a8ab9d038e8
Kalogeropoulos, Dimitrios
c3a1fd63-7db9-404d-9ed6-424c10e43c3a
Afshar, Farid
cede490a-9070-41dd-9018-81753c56f103
Hall, Nigel
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Rahman, Najiha
1aaa4871-6907-4bcb-8573-6d1038c6d29d
Lotery, Andrew J.
5ecc2d2d-d0b4-468f-ad2c-df7156f8e514
Eissa, Mahmoud
da55bf55-0bb6-42d0-82b3-2a8ab9d038e8
Kalogeropoulos, Dimitrios
c3a1fd63-7db9-404d-9ed6-424c10e43c3a
Afshar, Farid
cede490a-9070-41dd-9018-81753c56f103
Hall, Nigel
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Rahman, Najiha
1aaa4871-6907-4bcb-8573-6d1038c6d29d
Lotery, Andrew J.
5ecc2d2d-d0b4-468f-ad2c-df7156f8e514

Eissa, Mahmoud, Kalogeropoulos, Dimitrios, Afshar, Farid, Hall, Nigel, Rahman, Najiha and Lotery, Andrew J. (2025) Ocular syphilis revisited: a review of cases and evidence from the literature. Cureus, 17 (7), [e88926]. (doi:10.7759/cureus.88926).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aim: this case series seeks to share our experience with ocular syphilis by reporting the clinical findings and management of nine diagnosed cases.

Materials and methods: this retrospective case series comprises nine patients who presented to the Ophthalmology Department of Southampton General Hospital between 2013 and 2022. The series provides a comprehensive report on patients diagnosed with ocular syphilis, detailing the severity of the condition, associated symptoms, and the treatments administered.

Results: all cases in the study were diagnosed with syphilis based on ocular findings. The patients exhibited a wide range of visual acuity, from normal to as low as light perception vision, with corresponding posterior segment results and varied intraocular pressure data. Some patients had recently been diagnosed with co-infection involving the human immunodeficiency virus. Except for one patient who underwent intravenous ceftriaxone treatment, the majority received systemic therapy with intravenous benzylpenicillin. In four cases, prednisolone was administered in conjunction with the systemic treatment. For topical therapy, three patients were provided with cycloplegics and topical steroids to alleviate discomfort and prevent iris adhesions.

Conclusions: diagnosing ocular syphilis presents challenges, which emphasizes the value of excluding syphilis infection in patients exhibiting uveitis, optic nerve neuritis or atrophy, acute muscular palsy, or visual loss. Ocular syphilis warrants consideration during diagnosis, necessitates treatment akin to neurosyphilis, and mandates testing for other immunodeficiency diseases. Inadequate management may lead to persistent vision impairment.

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Accepted/In Press date: 28 July 2025
Published date: 28 July 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505295
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505295
ISSN: 2168-8184
PURE UUID: ea0a77f5-9380-4dbe-afb5-ad9263503ef1
ORCID for Nigel Hall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8570-9374
ORCID for Andrew J. Lotery: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5541-4305

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Date deposited: 06 Oct 2025 16:45
Last modified: 07 Oct 2025 01:45

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Contributors

Author: Mahmoud Eissa
Author: Dimitrios Kalogeropoulos
Author: Farid Afshar
Author: Nigel Hall ORCID iD
Author: Najiha Rahman

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