RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Posterior scleritis presenting as conjunctivitis in a child JF BMJ Case Reports FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP bcr2016217968 DO 10.1136/bcr-2016-217968 VO 2016 A1 Mallick, Jyotiranjan A1 Pujahari, Susant A1 Maharana, Prafulla Kumar YR 2016 UL http://casereports.bmj.com/content/2016/bcr-2016-217968.abstract AB A 14-year-old male child presented with redness and decreased vision in the right eye for 7 days. He was being treated for viral conjunctivitis for right eye at a local hospital. His visual acuity was 6/24 OD and 6/9 OS. Slit-lamp examination revealed diffuse conjunctival congestion in the right eye. Dilated fundus examination revealed mild disc hyperaemia and retinal striae in both the eyes. A peripapillary serous detachment of macula in the right eye was seen on optical coherence tomography. B scan ultrasonography revealed increased scleral thickening and characteristic ‘T’ sign in both the eyes. Investigations revealed no other relevant systemic association. A diagnosis of bilateral posterior scleritis was made. The patient was started on topical steroids and oral non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Within 2 weeks of therapy the visual acuity improved to 6/6, the serous detachment resolved and retinal striae reduced in both the eyes.