Health

What Is Optic Neuritis? Symptoms, Causes, Diagnosis, and Treatment

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Scientists have yet to identify what exactly gives rise to optic neuritis. Dr. Dinkin and other researchers and optic neuritis specialists point to overactivity of the immune system (much like autoimmune disease processes), in which the body attacks the myelin sheath as if it were a foreign invader. It can be triggered by a preceding viral infection or by bacterial infections, including tuberculosis, syphilis, and Lyme disease. “But it may occur without any clear cause,” Dinkin says.

Studies have estimated the annual incidence of optic neuritis in the United States to be as high as 6.4 per 100,000, with younger adults ages 18 to 45, women, and white people at greater risk. Optic neuritis also seems to be comparatively common among Asian populations.

In about one-third of cases, the trigger is multiple sclerosis (MS), which is characterized by periodic bouts of inflammation (called relapses) that can affect the brain, spinal cord, or optic nerves. Indeed, optic neuritis, which eventually affects about half of all people with MS, may be the first sign of this neurological disease.

RELATED: Eye Complications Associated With Multiple Sclerosis

Other inflammatory diseases associated with optic neuritis include the following:

Neuromyelitis Optica (NMO), or Devic’s Disease A central nervous system disorder, NMO resembles MS but involves primarily the optic nerve and spinal cord and less often the brain. Vision loss may be more severe in people with NMO than in those with MS.

Myelin Oligodendrocyte Glycoprotein (MOG) Antibody Disorder The immune system targets MOG, a protein located on the surface of myelin sheaths in the central nervous system. Like MS and NMO, MOG antibody disorder can cause repeated attacks of inflammation to the optic nerve, spinal cord, or brain.

Lupus In this case, the immune system can attack a variety of healthy tissues and organs, most commonly the skin, joints, heart, and kidneys. Occasionally, however, lupus can lead to optic nerve inflammation as well as other potentially serious eye conditions, such as retinal vasculitis, uveitis, scleritis, and Sjögren’s syndrome.

Sarcoidosis With sarcoidosis, clumps of inflammatory cells, or granulomas, can form in almost any organ in the body. Though usually found in the lungs and lymph nodes, they can also affect the skin and eyes. The cause isn’t known, but experts believe that viruses, bacteria, or chemicals may trigger this kind of immune system attack.

Optic neuritis has also been linked to viruses such as herpes, measles, and mumps, as well as the bacterial infection known as cat scratch disease.

Although most people affected are between ages 20 and 40, optic neuritis can potentially affect anyone at any age.

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