Management of Spontaneous Crystalline Lens Luxation in a Patient Diagnosed with Takayasu's Disease

Diagnostics (Basel). 2023 Apr 12;13(8):1400. doi: 10.3390/diagnostics13081400.

Abstract

Takayasu's disease is a chronic granulomatous arteriopathy that affects large vessels and their major branches. Nonspecific symptoms characterize the early phase, whereas findings of arterial occlusion and aneurysmal formation become manifest later. Ocular signs typically refer to retinal vascular involvement, as Takayasu arteritis or hypertensive retinopathy. We report a case of a 63-year-old woman suffering from Takayasu arteritis that complained of sudden onset of blurred vision in her left eye due to crystalline lens luxation in the vitreous cavity. The patient's past medical history was unremarkable for trauma, personal or familiar collagenopathies. Prompt surgical management was performed and the patient reached 0 LogMAR seven days after surgery. Our case illustrates the concomitant occurrence, never reported before, of two rare conditions in the same patient, namely, Takayasu arteritis and spontaneous lens dislocation. Further research and future knowledge are needed to explain whether Takayasu arteritis could obliquely injure zonular or fibrillar structures and whether these features may be possibly related.

Keywords: Takayasu arteritis; Yamane’s double-needle technique; intrascleral fixation of intraocular lens; spontaneous lens luxation.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.