Acute angle-closure glaucoma before, during, and after the outbreak of COVID-19 in China.

Acute angle-closure glaucoma before, during, and after the outbreak of COVID-19 in China.

Publication date: Oct 15, 2024

Acute angle-closure glaucoma (AACG) is a major cause of irreversible and severe visual function loss. Robust rise in AACG was observed in the ophthalmic outpatient clinics concomitant with the outbreak of COVID-19 infection in China after the relaxing of “zero-COVID policy” in early December 2022. Here we compared the demographic and clinical proļ¬les of patients with AACG before, during and after the COVID-19 outbreak. Underlying mechanisms were tentatively investigated. This is a retrospective comparative study. Consecutive cases with newly diagnosed AACGs in a tertiary eye hospital were retrospectively collected during December 17, 2022 to January 8, 2023. Data from the same period in 2018-2019 and 2019-2020, 2020-2021 and 2021-2022, and 2023-2024 were collected as pre-pandemic, pandemic-control, and post-pandemic control, respectively. For the patients in 2022-2023 outbreak group, COVID-19 infection was confirmed by reversed transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction or antibody test for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus disease 2 (SARS-CoV-2) from nasopharyngeal swabs. Ocular parameters, serum electrolytes and coagulative parameters were compared between COVID-19 positive and negative AACGs in observational group. SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid in the aqueous humor was detected. A total of 106 AACG cases were diagnosed during the outbreak period in 2022-2023. In contrast, 18 (in 2018-2019) and 22 (in 2019-2020) cases were included during pre-pandemic period, and 21 (in 2023-2024) during the post-pandemic period. Only 13 and 4 newly onset AACG were included in 2020-2021 and 2021-2022 during the pandemic-control period, respectively. Younger age and higher proportion of bilateral involvement were detected in COVID-19 outbreak group than that of other groups (p = 0. 034 and p = 0. 080). Sixty-eight (64. 2 %) patients in the outbreak group had a confirmed COVID-19 infection. Intervals between infection and AACG attack was 52 +/- 85h (0-15d). Fifty-three patients (77. 9 %) reported the applications of ibuprofen or other antipyretic medications and 25 (36. 8 %) reported large volume water intake before AACG attack. COVID-19-positive AACG patients had higher level of D-dimer than their negative counterparts (1. 13 +/- 2. 60 mg/L vs. 0. 46 +/- 0. 43 mg/L, p = 0. 083). No difference in IOP, serum electrolytes, and coagulative parameters other than D-dimer was observed between COVID-19 positive and negative cases. SARS-CoV-2 were negative in the aqueous humor from 14 COVID-19 positive and 8 negative patients. COVID-19 infection surged the onset of AACG in patients at risk. Mental stress, water intake, increased choroidal thickness due to SARS-CoV-2 induced ACE receptor activation, and hyper-coagulation, may contribute to the disease onset. Ocular involvement should not be ignored in both routine and new systemic emergent conditions.

Concepts Keywords
15d COVID-19
China Intraocular pressure
Coronavirus
Outpatient

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH angle-closure glaucoma
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH infection
disease IDO nucleic acid
drug DRUGBANK Ibuprofen
drug DRUGBANK Water
disease MESH stress water
disease MESH Long Covid

Original Article

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