Inflammation in the anterior part of the uvea; the uvea involves the iris, ciliary body and choroid
Aetiology
- Involves inflammation and immune cells in the anterior chamber of the eye
- This is usually caused by an autoimmune process but can be due to infection, trauma, ischaemia or malignancy
Idiopathic
- Accounts for a significant proportion of cases
Autoimmune and Inflammatory Associations
- HLA-B27–associated spondyloarthropathies:
- Ankylosing spondylitis
- Reactive arthritis
- Psoriatic arthritis
- Inflammatory bowel disease–associated arthritis
- Juvenile idiopathic arthritis
- Sarcoidosis
- Behçet disease
Infectious Causes
- Herpes simplex virus (HSV)
- Varicella-zoster virus (VZV)
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Treponema pallidum (syphilis)
- Toxoplasma gondii (less common in isolated anterior uveitis)
Trauma and Iatrogenic Causes
- Blunt or penetrating ocular trauma
- Postoperative inflammation
- Lens-induced uveitis
Clinical presentation
Symptoms
- Usually presents with unilateral symptoms that start spontaneously without a history of trauma or precipitating events
- May occur with a flare of an associated disease such as reactive arthritis (Reiter's) - 'can't see, pee, or climb a tree'
- Dull, aching, painful red eye
- Vision may be reduced
- Photophobia
Signs
- Circumcorneal red eye
- Ciliary injection
- Keratic precipitates (mutton fats)
- Hypopyon
- Synechiae - small or irregular pupil due to adhesions pulling the iris into abnormal shapes
- Cells and flare in the anterior chamber (Tyndal Phenomenon)
- Iris Nodules → Koeppe’s Nodules, Busacca’s Nodules
- Iris neovascularization (rubeosis iridis)
- Pupil miosis


Keratic precipitates

Posterior Synechiae

Flare in anterior chamber

Cells in anterior chamber
Management
- Topical Corticosteroids
- Mainstay of treatment
- Prednisolone acetate 1% eye drops every 1-2 hours
- Tapered based on clinical response
- Cycloplegic–Mydriatic Agents
- Atropine, homatropine, or cyclopentolate
- Prevent posterior synechiae and relieve ciliary spasm
- Antimicrobial Therapy
- Indicated when an infectious cause is identified (e.g., antivirals for HSV/VZV)
- Systemic Therapy
- Oral corticosteroids or immunosuppressive agents for severe, bilateral, or refractory cases