This article is taken from the 1st
newsletter.
This article aims to discuss the treatment of Uveitis. The reasoning
behind treatment will be concentrated upon instead of trying to cover a long
list, and detailed descriptions of, different treatments.
Two of the most important things to remember about Uveitis are that:
- There are many quite different causes.
- There are different types of Uveitis normally depending on
which part of the eye is affected. e.g. anterior or posterior (or front or
back).
Although this means that the types of treatment will vary considerably,
there are also certain treatments that will be common to various types of
Uveitis.
If you are interested in finding out more about your condition and its
treatment then it is very important to get the most accurate description of
your uveitis from your doctors. This will help you to pick out the information
that is most relevant to you. Some of the terms you may hear, such as
glaucoma, may refer to a complication of Uveitis, but is all part of the whole
picture.
As you can see, so far, it can all get terribly confusing, but as long as
you remember that the term uveitis is used to describe a variety of
conditions, then you should always be able to select the relevant bits of
information which you need for your particular case.
WHAT SHOULD TREATMENT ACHIEVE?
- Relieve pain and discomfort
- Prevent sight loss due to the disease or its complications
- Treat the cause of the disease where possible
All drugs and other treatments used in uveitis are powerful in their action
and may have significant side effects. The dilemma for the doctors, then, is
to balance the benefits of the treatments against the
possible harmful effects.
To get this balance right the doctors must know a lot about our condition
and be able to assess, as much as possible, things like:
- What are the risks to our eyesight?
- What problems are we having with our medication?
- What is our eyesight actually like?
The more we know about our condition, the better we will be able to
help our doctors decide what is the most appropriate treatment for us and how
to get the balance of benefits against possible side effects just right.
To illustrate this we could look at the potential problem of long term
steroid use. Steroids may be a vital way of controlling uveitis and preventing
vision loss, but we know that side effects of steroids can include causing
cataracts and raised eye pressure. Following a close assessment of a case, the
doctors may feel that there is a high risk of visual loss in the future. And
if both eyes are involved, then they may feel more confident about treating a
cataract or raised eye pressure than letting the uveitis go under treated by
avoiding the more vigorous use of steroids or other drugs.
This, hopefully demonstrates the idea of this balance to be struck and if
we, as patients, armed with a bit of good information about our condition can
describe our condition, our visual problems and any problems with our general
health, then we will have the best chance of allowing the doctors to choose
the most appropriate approach to our treatment.
The aims of treatment have been mentioned and the fact that deciding
between “too much or too little treatment” can be difficult. Before
continuing, it is probably worth stressing that the treatment we receive may
be dealing with:
- the actual process of uveitis
- complications arising from the uveitis eg raised eye pressure
- underlying medical conditions such as toxoplasmosis or ankylosing
spondylitis, (not to mention dozens of others)
It is quite important to be aware of this because this is where a lot of
confusion arises. However one type of treatment or drug may be used to treat
one or more of the above points.
It might now be worth thinking about what uveitis is, exactly, and
what it means to treat the “actual process of uveitis?”
The main disease process going on in uveitis is called inflammation. The
“itis” bit in uveitis means that it is an inflammatory type of disease.
(arthritis – inflammation affecting the joints is one of many other
examples). I think it is worth a bit of a struggle to try to understand what
inflammation is, because it should help you to understand how different
treatments work, especially steroid treatment.
So what is inflammation?
It is a very familiar sounding word, conjuring up visions of a sore, red,
throbbing thumb following a nasty encounter with a hammer. Although this
scenario describes nicely some features of inflammation, it is a quite
specific and very important process in the body. Also many people associate
inflammation with infection and/or pain but this is misleading because
inflammation has different causes, as we will see, and it may be completely
painless, and be present with or without the presence of infection. A
reasonable definition of inflammation is:
“The reaction of living tissues, especially the small blood vessels and
the blood cells within them, to injury.”
The “injury” can take different forms:
Trauma back to our hammer again and also burns and frostbite.
Infection from bacteria, viruses or fungi. These are recognised as
foreign bodies and we react against them
Allergies foreign bodies such as pollen grains cause the
inflammation here.
Our own immune system This is a complicated area but essentially
our immune system (the body’s defence system), unfortunately recognises
a bit of our own body as “foreign“. This bit may be very small, like a
protein molecule, but we react against it and cause inflammation.
To get back to the plot, these different causes of inflammation match
nicely the many different causes of uveitis. This wide variety of causes is
something that is always worth remembering about in uveitis, (inflammation is
the common factor with them all).
“Unknown Cause”
At this point, it may be worth considering the many people with uveitis who
are told that the cause of their problem is unknown. I think some people may
worry that the cause just hasn’t been found in their case, but it is more
likely to mean that their condition falls into the “immune system” group.
This is something that could be asked of the doctors treating you if it is a
concern.
Types of Treatment
As mentioned at the start, it is not intended to cover all the details of
the various drugs and treatments here. This will hopefully be well covered in
future newsletters and in the range of leaflets available.
I hope this article will help you to understand the reasoning behind
the different types of treatment that we may receive.