Volume 26, Number 2—February 2020
Dispatch
Ocular Spiroplasma ixodetis in Newborns, France
Figure 1
![Ocular anterior segment in 3 newborn infants with bilateral total cataract and anterior uveitis related to endogenous Spiroplasma ixodetis infection. A, B) Case-patient 1. Right (A) and left (B) eyes of a 4-week-old girl showing total cataract, posterior synechiae due to a cyclitic fibrinic membrane, and large keratic precipitates more visible in the left eye. The immature iris vasculature is dilated in the context of anterior segment inflammation. C, D) Case-patient 2. Right (C) and left (D) ey](/eid/images/19-1097-F1.jpg)
Figure 1. Ocular anterior segment in 3 newborn infants with bilateral total cataract and anterior uveitis related to endogenous Spiroplasma ixodetis infection. A, B) Case-patient 1. Right (A) and left (B) eyes of a 4-week-old girl showing total cataract, posterior synechiae due to a cyclitic fibrinic membrane, and large keratic precipitates more visible in the left eye. The immature iris vasculature is dilated in the context of anterior segment inflammation. C, D) Case-patient 2. Right (C) and left (D) eyes of a 6-week-old boy showing total cataract, posterior synechiae, dilated immature iris vessels, and few keratic precipitates more visible in the left eye. E) Case-patient 3. Left eye of a 1-month-old boy with multiple retrocorneal white deposits, total cataract, posterior synechiae, and immature dilated iris vessels. F) Case-patient 3. Electron transmission microscopy of crystalline lens material from a 2-month-old boy with total cataract and anterior uveitis, revealing the presence of microorganisms with spiral-like projections highly suggestive of bacteria from the Spiroplasma genus.