Uveitis and Systemic Inflammatory Markers in Convalescent Phase of Ebola Virus Disease
John R. Chancellor
1, Sriranjani P. Padmanabhan
1, Thomas C. Greenough, Richard Sacra, Richard T. Ellison, Lawrence C. Madoff, Rebecca J. Droms, David M. Hinkle, George K. Asdourian, Robert W. Finberg, Ute Stroher, Timothy M. Uyeki, and Olga M. Cerón
Author affiliations: University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA (J.R. Chancellor, S.P. Padmanablan, T.C. Greenough, R. Sacra, R.T. Ellison III, L.C. Madoff, R.J. Droms, D.M. Hinkle, G.K. Asdourian, R.W. Finberg, O.M. Cerón); Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA (L.C. Madoff); Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA (U. Stroher, T.M. Uyeki)
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Figure 1
Figure 1. Slit lamp examination of the left eye of a physician from the United States who contracted Ebola virus disease in Liberia and had eye inflammation develop during convalescence. Image shows diffuse conjunctival injection, mild corneal edema with fine inferior keratic precipitates, fibrin reaction, and leukocytes in the anterior chamber without hypopyon. Used with permission of the patient.
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