This visual impairment case involves a female patient in Nevada who came into the emergency room after experiencing nausea, vomiting, and severe weight loss. Though she was given medication to combat her nausea, doctors decided to order a CAT scan and have an extensive blood panel completed on the patient. However, her symptoms only worsened, even after being discharged from the emergency room entirely. After coming back to the emergency room again and again, consistently cleared and discharged by medical staff, the woman began to feel her arms become numb and constantly cold. She was admitted, once again, to the ER; after exhibiting symptoms of seizures and headaches, doctors decided to release her from the hospital once she could eat meals without vomiting. As the months passed, she began to go blind, with sharp, concentrated pain in the side of her head blurring her vision and causing her to consult an ophthalmologist. The doctor merely prescribed her  some Moxifloxacin eye drops for what he thought was conjunctivitis. Weeks later, she lost her sight entirely. Doctors eventually concluded she had an autoimmune disorder, but the delayed diagnosis was detrimental to her standard of living and the patient was never able to fully recover from the ramifications of the late diagnosis.