Accidental intravitreal injection of a veterinary inactivated FMD vaccine resulting in noninfectious intraocular inflammation: a case report - Summary - MDSpire
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Accidental intravitreal injection of a veterinary inactivated FMD vaccine resulting in noninfectious intraocular inflammation: a case report
To analyze the pathogenesis of severe noninfectious intraocular inflammation resulting from accidental injection of a bivalent inactivated vaccine against swine foot-and-mouth disease into the vitreous cavity.
Key Findings:
Revise to avoid implications about visual acuity improvement unless directly supported.
Interpretation:
Remove unsupported conclusions about risks associated with veterinary vaccines.
Limitations:
Limited generalizability due to the singular nature of the case report.
Lack of long-term follow-up data on visual outcomes post-surgery.
Conclusion:
Revise to avoid suggesting surgical intervention necessity unless explicitly stated.
The movement of immune cells through the retinal vasculature has long been inferred from laboratory models. Now, advances in imaging are allowing clinicians to observe these processes directly. At the 2026 meeting of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO) in Denver, Richard B. Rosen, MD, ScD(hon), FACS, FASRS, FARVO, described early clinical work using adaptive optics scanning laser ophthalmoscopy (AOSLO) to visualize leukocyte trafficking in vivo.