Autoimmune Uveitis: What You Need to Know
What is Autoimmune uveitis?
Uveitis is inflammation of the uvea, the middle layer of the eye that includes the iris, ciliary body, and choroid. When the inflammation is caused by the body's own immune system attacking eye tissues, it is called autoimmune uveitis. This type of uveitis is not triggered by infection or trauma; instead, an abnormal immune response mistakenly targets ocular antigens, leading to pain, redness, and visual disturbances.
Autoimmune uveitis can affect one eye (unilateral) or both eyes (bilateral) and may be acute (sudden onset) or chronic (lasting months to years). Prompt recognition and treatment are essential because unchecked inflammation can cause permanent damage to the retina, optic nerve, and other structures, potentially leading to vision loss.
Common Causes
Autoimmune uveitis is often a manifestation of a systemic autoimmune disease. The most frequently associated conditions include:
- Behçetâs disease â a multisystem vasculitis that causes recurring oral/genital ulcers and eye inflammation.
- ankylosing spondylitis â a chronic inflammatory arthritis of the spine that can involve the eye.
- Sarcoidosis â granulomatous disease that frequently affects lungs and lymph nodes, but also the eye.
- VogtâKoyanagiâHarada (VKH) disease â an autoimmune attack on melanocyteâcontaining tissues, leading to bilateral uveitis, vitiligo, and meningismus.
- Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) â the most common cause of uveitis in children.
- Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) â can produce intermittent or chronic uveitis.
- Multiple sclerosis (MS) â optic neuritis is classic, but uveitis may coexist.
- Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) â although less common, RA can trigger ocular inflammation.
- Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohnâs disease & ulcerative colitis) â extraâintestinal manifestations may involve the eye.
- HLAâB27âpositive seronegative spondyloarthropathies â includes reactive arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and others.
Associated Symptoms
Because the uvea is richly vascular, inflammation often presents with a combination of ocular and systemic signs:
- Redness of the eye (especially around the cornea)
- Eye pain, which may worsen with bright light (photophobia)
- Blurred or decreased vision
- Floaters (dark spots or threads that drift across the visual field)
- Reduced color perception
- Feeling of âgrittyâ sensation, as if something is inside the eye
- Headache or scalp tenderness (especially with HLAâB27 disease)
- Systemic clues: oral/genital ulcers (Behçetâs), joint pain, skin rashes, chronic cough, or neurological symptoms that point to an underlying autoimmune disorder.
When to See a Doctor
Uveitis can progress rapidly. Seek ophthalmologic evaluation promptly if you notice any of the following:
- Sudden onset of eye redness with pain or photophobia.
- New floaters, flashes of light, or a curtainâlike shadow across the vision.
- Unexplained decline in visual acuity, especially if it occurs in both eyes.
- Persistent (more than 24â48âŻhours) conjunctival redness that does not improve with overâtheâcounter eye drops.
- Associated systemic symptoms such as fever, joint swelling, oral ulcers, or rash that suggest an autoimmune disease.
Early intervention reduces the risk of complications such as cataract, glaucoma, retinal detachment, or permanent vision loss.
Diagnosis
Diagnosing autoimmune uveitis requires a coordinated approach between an ophthalmologist and, often, a rheumatologist or internist.
Eyeâspecific evaluation
- Slitâlamp examination â magnified view of the anterior segment to detect cells/flare in the anterior chamber.
- Fundoscopy (indirect ophthalmoscopy) â assesses posterior segment inflammation, vasculitis, or choroidal lesions.
- Optical coherence tomography (OCT) â highâresolution imaging of the retina and macula to detect swelling or fluid.
- Fluorescein angiography â highlights retinal bloodâvessel leakage.
- Ultrasound Bâscan â used when media opacity (e.g., cataract) blocks view of the posterior segment.
Systemic workâup
- Complete blood count (CBC), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and Câreactive protein (CRP) â markers of inflammation.
- Autoantibody panels: HLAâB27 typing, ANA, antiâdsDNA, rheumatoid factor, antiâCCP, and antiâENA.
- Specific disease testing: serum angiotensinâconverting enzyme (ACE) for sarcoidosis, QuantiFERONâTB Gold for tuberculosis (to rule out infectious uveitis), and chest Xâray or CT for pulmonary sarcoidosis.
- When indicated, lumbar puncture, MRI of brain/spine, or joint imaging to evaluate systemic disease activity.
Treatment Options
Treatment aims to suppress inflammation, preserve vision, and manage the underlying autoimmune disease.
Medical therapies
- Topical corticosteroids (e.g., prednisolone acetate 1âŻ% eye drops) â firstâline for mild anterior uveitis.
- Cycloplegic agents (e.g., atropine, cyclopentolate) â relieve ciliary spasm and prevent synechiae (adhesions).
- Periocular or intravitreal corticosteroid injections â for intermediate, posterior, or refractory cases.
- Systemic corticosteroids (oral prednisone 0.5â1âŻmg/kg) â used when inflammation involves the posterior segment or is bilateral.
- Immunomodulatory (steroidâsparing) agents:
- Antimetabolites: methotrexate, mycophenolate mofetil, azathioprine.
- Tâcell inhibitors: cyclosporine, tacrolimus.
- Biologic agents: adalimumab (TNFâα inhibitor) â FDAâapproved for nonâinfectious uveitis; infliximab, certolizumab, tocilizumab.
- Adjunctive therapy â NSAIDs for pain, intraâocular pressureâlowering drops if steroidâinduced glaucoma develops.
Home & lifestyle measures
- Follow the prescribed eyeâdrop schedule exactly; missing doses can trigger flareâups.
- Avoid rubbing the eyes; use artificial tears to relieve dryness caused by medication.
- Wear UVâprotective sunglasses to reduce lightâinduced discomfort.
- Maintain a balanced diet rich in omegaâ3 fatty acids (found in fish, flaxseed) which may modestly help inflammation.
- Quit smoking â smoking worsens autoimmune activity and impairs healing.
- Monitor blood pressure, blood sugar, and liver/kidney function regularly when taking systemic immunosuppressants.
Prevention Tips
While an autoimmune process cannot be eliminated entirely, the risk of flareâups can be lowered:
- Adhere strictly to maintenance immunosuppressive therapy even when you feel well.
- Schedule regular ophthalmology and rheumatology followâups; early adjustment of medication can prevent recurrence.
- Promptly treat systemic disease activity (e.g., joint flares, skin lesions) to reduce ocular spillâover.
- Vaccinations: stay upâtoâdate with influenza, pneumococcal, and COVIDâ19 vaccines; infections can trigger immune dysregulation.
- Limit exposure to known triggers such as bright, flickering lights (computer screens, strobe lighting) if they aggravate symptoms.
- Practice good eye hygiene â wash hands before applying eye drops and avoid contaminated lenses.
Emergency Warning Signs
- Sudden, severe eye pain with rapid vision loss.
- Sudden appearance of a dark curtain or shadow across part of the visual field.
- Rapid increase in eye redness accompanied by swelling of the eyelids.
- Signs of high intraâocular pressure (e.g., halos around lights, nausea/vomiting).
- New onset of double vision or loss of peripheral vision.
If you experience any of these, seek immediate care at an emergency department or an urgentâcare ophthalmology service.
Key Takeâaways
Autoimmune uveitis is a sightâthreatening inflammation driven by systemic immune disorders. Early diagnosis, aggressive inflammation control, and coordinated care between eye specialists and rheumatologists dramatically improve visual outcomes. Patients should be vigilant for redâeye symptoms, follow treatment plans closely, and seek urgent care for any rapid visual changes.
Sources: Mayo Clinic. âUveitis.â; American Academy of Ophthalmology. âUveitis Overview.â; National Eye Institute, NIH. âAutoimmune Uveitis.â; CDC. âBehçetâs Disease.â; WHO. âGuidelines for the Management of NonâInfectious Uveitis.â; Cleveland Clinic. âBiologic Therapies for Uveitis.â; peerâreviewed articles in *Ophthalmology* and *Arthritis & Rheumatology* (2022â2024).
```