## Correct Answer: C. Penetrating trauma Sympathetic ophthalmia (SO) is a bilateral granulomatous anterior and posterior uveitis that develops following ocular trauma or surgery. The discriminating fact is that SO occurs specifically after **penetrating trauma** that breaches the blood-retinal barrier and exposes uveal tissue antigens to the immune system. The mechanism involves a delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction (Type IV) to uveal antigens, typically triggered 4–8 weeks (range: 1 week to years) after the inciting event. Penetrating trauma causes disruption of the globe's integrity, allowing uveal pigment and proteins to leak into systemic circulation, sensitizing T-lymphocytes. The inciting eye (exciting eye) develops anterior uveitis, while the fellow eye (sympathizing eye) develops bilateral uveitis. In Indian clinical practice, penetrating ocular injuries from agricultural trauma, road traffic accidents, and industrial accidents are common precipitants. The condition is now rare due to prompt primary repair and anti-inflammatory therapy post-trauma. Historically, enucleation of the exciting eye within 2 weeks could prevent SO, but modern management focuses on aggressive anti-inflammatory therapy (systemic corticosteroids, immunosuppressants) rather than globe removal. The key teaching point: penetrating trauma → uveal antigen exposure → immune sensitization → bilateral uveitis weeks later. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Chemical injury** — Chemical injuries cause surface and anterior segment inflammation but do NOT breach the blood-retinal barrier sufficiently to expose uveal antigens systemically. While chemical burns are serious ocular emergencies requiring immediate irrigation and management, they trigger acute chemical conjunctivitis and keratitis, not the delayed immune-mediated bilateral uveitis characteristic of SO. SO requires uveal tissue disruption and antigen presentation. **B. Urinary tract infection** — UTI is a systemic infection unrelated to ocular trauma or surgery. While systemic infections can cause uveitis (e.g., tuberculosis, syphilis), UTI does not trigger the specific immune mechanism of SO. This is an NBE distractor testing whether students confuse systemic infections causing uveitis with the post-traumatic immune sensitization required for SO. **D. Blunt trauma** — Blunt ocular trauma causes hyphema, iridodialysis, angle recession, and anterior uveitis but does NOT breach the globe's integrity to expose uveal antigens. SO requires penetrating injury with uveal tissue disruption. Blunt trauma may cause secondary glaucoma and inflammation but lacks the mechanism for systemic immune sensitization to uveal antigens that defines SO. ## High-Yield Facts - **Sympathetic ophthalmia** is a bilateral granulomatous uveitis triggered by penetrating ocular trauma or surgery, NOT blunt trauma or chemical injury. - **Latency period**: SO develops 4–8 weeks post-trauma (range 1 week to years); the exciting eye shows anterior uveitis first, then the sympathizing eye follows. - **Pathophysiology**: Type IV hypersensitivity reaction to uveal antigens exposed by penetrating trauma; immune sensitization requires blood-retinal barrier breach. - **Modern management**: Systemic corticosteroids (1 mg/kg prednisolone) and immunosuppressants (azathioprine, mycophenolate); enucleation of exciting eye is now rarely indicated. - **Incidence**: Rare in India today due to prompt primary repair and anti-inflammatory therapy; historically more common when traumatized eyes were left untreated. ## Mnemonics **SO = Penetrating + Uveal Antigen Exposure** **S**ympathetic **O**phthalmia = **P**enetrating trauma → **U**veal antigen leak → immune sensitization → bilateral uveitis. Remember: penetrating (not blunt), uveal (not just anterior), bilateral (sympathizing eye follows). **4-8 Week Rule** SO typically presents **4–8 weeks** after penetrating trauma. Early uveitis in the exciting eye, delayed bilateral uveitis in the sympathizing eye. Use this timeline to differentiate from acute post-traumatic inflammation. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs blunt trauma with SO to test whether students confuse any ocular trauma with SO. The key discriminator is that SO requires **penetrating injury** with uveal tissue exposure; blunt trauma causes anterior inflammation but does not breach the blood-retinal barrier sufficiently to trigger systemic immune sensitization. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian emergency departments, a farmer presenting 6 weeks after penetrating eye injury with bilateral anterior uveitis and vitritis should raise immediate suspicion for SO. Prompt recognition and aggressive systemic corticosteroid therapy can prevent blindness; delayed diagnosis often leads to chronic uveitis and vision loss in both eyes. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 35 (Ophthalmology); Robbins Ch. 29 (Hypersensitivity reactions)_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.