Choroiditis Disseminated

Choroidal dystrophy is a rare ophthalmological disease characterized by damage to the inner membranes of the eyes - the choroid and retina. Often this pathology leads to the development of chorioretinal dystrophy.

Why does choroidopathy occur? The reasons for the development of this disease are very diverse. The causative agents may be:

* inflammatory processes in the internal membranes - vasculitis, encephalomyelitis; * inflammatory pathologies of muscles or bone tissue; * dystrophic disorders of an endocrine nature and others. * Wagner's syndrome. This term includes vascular pathology of the brain and a number of other organs, for example: the liver, pancreas and spleen. When Wagner's syndrome occurs, the patient exhibits many symptoms, which makes it difficult to identify it in a timely manner. This disease is quite difficult to diagnose; * mechanical head injury, including after drinking alcohol; * presence of infectious agents; * the patient has vitiligo or hereditary retinitis pigmentosa; * infective endocarditis in humans.



Choroidal disseminated disease is a chronic multisystem inflammatory eye disease resulting from the action of an unknown infectious agent on the sympathetic nervous system in conditions of immunosuppression.

Choroiditis is the rarest of the uveitis types and accounts for only about 5% of the total.

The main reason for the development of the disease is damage to nerve fibers. Pathology leads to destruction of the choroid, a decrease in the volume of the vitreous, which in turn causes:

- Vision problems; - Headache; -