Hyalitis

Hialitis is an inflammation of the vitreous body of the eye. The vitreous is a clear, jelly-like mass that fills the back of the eyeball.

With hyalitis, the vitreous body loses its transparency and elasticity. This can lead to blurred vision and the appearance of “floaters” or “dots” in the field of vision.

The causes of hyalitis can be different: eye injuries, inflammatory and infectious diseases (for example, tuberculosis), circulatory disorders. Sometimes hyalitis develops as a complication after eye surgery.

Diagnosis of hyalitis is based on ophthalmoscopy and ultrasound examination of the eye. Treatment depends on the cause of the disease and may include anti-inflammatory drugs, antibiotics, and physical therapy. The prognosis for hyalitis can be serious, including loss of vision, so timely consultation with a doctor and adequate treatment are important.

There is also a disease called stellate hyalosis (formerly stellate hyalitis). This is a degenerative change in the vitreous body, in which small white inclusions form in it. Stellate hyalosis is not an inflammatory process, unlike true hyalitis.



HYALITIS (hyalitis, inflammation of the vitreous body of the eye) is an inflammatory disease of the peripheral parts of the retina and vitreous fluid of the eye, the cause of which is an allergic reaction of rejection of one’s own antigen proteins under the influence of allergens. At the same time, milky plates accumulate deep in the vitreous body of the eye, which gives the disease its name. Sometimes they look like microscopic stellar particles.

Hyalitis can develop for various reasons. This can be affected by viral infection, allergies, intoxication. Risk factors for the development of hyalitis include: increased sensitivity of the body to



Inflammation of the vitreous body of the eye Hilalitis. Hyalite

The inflammatory process is observed on both sides with various damage to the eye tissues, such as wounds, trauma, burns. It is more severe in young men than in women. The consequences are not easily eliminated, so they can be considered permanent. In an advanced form, the disease changes the tear performance of the eyeball, affects the quality of vision and worsens it depending on the location of the inflammatory process