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Figure 1. A 26-year-old man who presented with blurred vision was found to have bilateral papilledema and diminished visual acuity (20/60). Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain and orbits was normal, and an examination of cerebrospinal fluid showed 120 monocytes per cubic millimeter. A diagnosis of aseptic meningitis and neuroretinitis was made. On questioning, the patient revealed that he had recently acquired two playful kittens and that he had had transient swelling of a right cervical lymph node two weeks before his vision became blurred. Macular edema with stellate exudates developed in his right eye, and empirical treatment with . . . [Full Text of this Article] |