Ralph S. Riffenburgh
University of Southern California
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Ophthalmology | 1993
Elisa N. Morinelli; Pravin U. Dugel; Ralph S. Riffenburgh; Narsing A. Rao
PURPOSE The purposes of this study are to determine the incidence of infectious opportunistic choroiditis in patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), to study the association of these choroidal infections with systemic dissemination, and to investigate the life expectancy and cause of death in patients with infectious opportunistic choroiditis. METHODS A total of 470 eyes of 235 consecutive autopsies of patients with AIDS were examined by histopathologic methods. The clinical charts and autopsy reports of these patients were subsequently reviewed for presence of systemic dissemination of various infectious agents. RESULTS Of the 235 patients, 18 were found to have infectious choroiditis. The etiologic agents found were: Cryptococcus neoformans, Pneumocystis carinii, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Histoplasma capsulatum, Candida, Aspergillus fumigatus, Toxoplasma gondii, and Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare. In 15 of these 18 patients, the cause of death was considered to be due to systemic dissemination of the organism causing the choroiditis. Only 4 of the 18 cases of infectious choroiditis were diagnosed during life, and the survival time of these patients after diagnosis was only 25 days. Five of the 18 patients also were found to have cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection of the retina. CONCLUSION Multifocal choroiditis due to endogenous infectious emboli in patients with AIDS reflects systemic dissemination and localization of infectious agents predominantly in the choriocapillaris. Early diagnosis and treatment are imperative and may be life-saving.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1986
Jeffrey B. Robin; Richard F. Beatty; Scott Dunn; Melvin D. Trousdale; Ralph S. Riffenburgh; Narsing A. Rao; Ronald E. Smith
Two patients who had undergone radial keratotomy developed delayed postoperative infectious keratitis. Both patients had surgery at the same outpatient facility, and their procedures had been performed by the same surgeon. The corneal lesions appeared similar in both cases, consisting of white irregular infiltrates with radiating projections and fluffy, indistinct margins. Although they were found at all levels, the lesions were most concentrated in the mid-to-deep stroma and were associated with overlying epithelial defects. In both cases, Mycobacterium chelonei was isolated from corneal biopsy specimens. Both patients were treated with topical fortified amikacin; in one there was complete resolution of the corneal infiltrates with medical therapy alone. Although the other patients lesions initially appeared to resolve with medical therapy, she eventually required corneal transplantation because of recurrence of the infiltrates. Histopathologically, the infiltrates consisted of myriads of acid-fast bacteria with rare inflammatory cell infiltrations.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1983
Michael Reynard; Ralph S. Riffenburgh; Edmond F. Maes
A retrospective clinicopathologic study, conducted to determine the course of disease in 30 cases of sympathetic ophthalmia with clinical follow-up of at least six months (average, 12.7 years), showed that 21 of 30 patients retained visual acuities of 20/50 or better in the sympathizing eye. The severity of inflammation graded histologically in the exciting eye did not correlate with the clinical course of final visual acuity in the sympathizing eye. Enucleation of the exciting eye within two weeks of the onset of symptoms was associated with a relatively benign clinical course (P = .008). Corticosteroid treatment in patients who underwent enucleation more than two weeks after the onset of symptoms was associated with a good visual outcome (P = .009). Early enucleation of a blind exciting eye and corticosteroid treatment appear to be important variables that influence the visual prognosis in the sympathizing eye.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1975
Alan L. Norton; W. Jann Brown; Melvin R. Carlson; Irvin S. Pilger; Ralph S. Riffenburgh
Six months after cataract extraction, a 71-year-old man had cystoid macular edema confirmed by fluorescein angiography. Microscopic examination revealed cystoid spaces in the outer plexiform and outer nuclear layer of the neurosensory retina. Chronic inflammatory cells were scattered throughout the ciliary body. Inflammatory cells were also present in a section of iris that had an adherent strand of vitreous leading to the pars plana. Comparison of these findings with other related clinical entities supported the hypothesis that ciliary body inflammation may play a significant role in postcataract extraction macular edema.
Journal of Forensic Sciences | 1991
Ralph S. Riffenburgh; Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran
The authors studied 77 pairs of eyes removed from children who had died of suspected child abuse. Forty-seven of the cases had retinal hemorrhages. Those showing retinal hemorrhages were younger children and had fewer other stigmata of child abuse. Hemorrhages are more likely to occur in cases where the child was shaken or swung than in those with severe direct head trauma. The authors recommend that examination of the eyes be included in the autopsies of all small children who died without an obvious cause of death. Experience in both processing and reading of ocular material is necessary for reliable results.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1983
T. Rodman Wood; Meriel L. Wu; Ralph S. Riffenburgh
Although nonsurgical ophthalmologic practice depends on refraction, in recent years interest in this procedure has decreased. The ophthalmologist, however, must recognize that a well done refraction builds the patients confidence and is the basis on which most surgical practices develop.
Postgraduate Medicine | 1974
Ralph S. Riffenburgh
The active listening technique is useful in problem areas of medical interviewing. Several examples of physician-patient exchanges are given, with comments.
Ophthalmology | 1991
Ralph S. Riffenburgh; Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1953
Benjamin Milder; Ralph S. Riffenburgh
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1954
Ralph S. Riffenburgh