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Download Fungal Keratitis
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Fungal Keratitis Etiology • i. Filamentous fungi : – Aspergillus (most common), Fusarium, Alternaria, Cephalosporium, Curvularia and Penicillium. • ii. Yeasts: Candida and Cryptococcus. Modes of infection Modes of infection • i. Injury by vegetative material such as crop leaf, branch of a tree, straw, hay or decaying vegetable matter. • ii. Injury by animal tail is another mode of infection. • iii. Patients who are immunosuppressed systemically or locally such as patients suffering from dry eye, herpetic keratitis, bullous keratopathy or postoperative cases of keratoplasty. Clinical features • Symptoms : – are similar to the central bacterial corneal ulcer – less marked than the equal-sized bacterial ulcer – overall course is slow and torpid. Symptoms Fungal Bacterial Signs • Dry in appearance. • Feathery borders • Surrounded by a yellow line of demarcation which gradually deepens into a gutter • An immune ring (Wesseley) : deposition of immune complexes and inflammatory cells around the ulcer. • Satellite lesions. • Hypopyon : thick and immobile, and is due to direct invasion into the anterior chamber of fungal hyphae enmeshed in thick exudates. • There is marked ciliary and conjunctival congestion, Laboratory investigations • wet KOH, • Calcofluor white, • Gram's and Giemsa- stained films for fungal hyphae and • culture on Sabouraud's agar medium. Treatment • 1. Topical antifungal eye drops should be used • for a long period (6 to 8 weeks: – Natamycin (5%) eye drops – Fluconazol (0.2%) eye drops – Nystatin (3.5%) eye ointment. • Systemic antifungal drugs may be required for severe cases of fungal keratitis. Tablet fluconazole or ketoconazole may be given for 2-3 weeks. Viral keratitis • Herpes simplex • Herpes zoster Herpes simplex Clinical reactivation Herpes simplex – ocular manifestations • • • • Blepharitis, Conjunctivitis, Keratitis Iridocyclitis Primary infection • • • • Without previous viral exposure, Usually in childhood Subclinical or mild prodromal symptoms. Blepharitis and follicular conjunctivitis :mild and self-limited. • Treatment, if necessary, involves topical aciclovir ointment for the eye and/or cream for skin lesions. • The initial corneal lesion is a superficial Punctate keratitis— – numerous minute whitish plaques , arranged in rows or groups. – Desquamate erosions heal rapidly leaving no opacity, but are accompanied by great irritation, lacrimation and blepharospasm. – In all cases the cornea is relatively insensitive. • The corneal involvement can be – Epithelial (dendritic or geographic keratitis), – stromal (necrotizing and non-necrotizing stromalkeratitis) and – endothelial Dendritic ulcers Swollen opaque epithelial cells arranged in a coarse stellate punctate pattern Central desquamation a linear-branching (dendritic) ulcer with terminal buds • Floor of the ulcer stains with fluorescein and the virus-laden cells at the margin take up rose bengal. • There is an associated marked diminution of corneal sensations. fluorescein rose bengal Geographical ulcer • Sometimes, the branches of dendritic ulcer enlarge and coalesce to form a large epithelial ulcer with a 'geographical' or 'amoeboid' configuration. • The use of steroids in dendritic ulcer hastens the formation of geographical ulcer. Specific treatment • 1. Antiviral drugs are the first choice presently. – Aciclovir – Ganciclovir – Triflurothymidine – Vidarabine • 2. Mechanical debridement : helps by removing the virus-laden cells. Disciform keratitis Pathogenesis HSV Hypersensitivity reaction Disciform keratitis Signs > Focal disc-shaped patch of stromal oedema without necrosis, > Folds in Descemet's membrane, Central epithelial and stromal oedema keratic precipitates; Disciform Keratitis Wessely ring precipitates • Ring of stromal infilterate (Wessley immune ring): It signifies the junction between viral antigen and host antibody. • Corneal sensations are diminished. • Intraocular pressure (IOP) may be raised despite only mild anterior uveitis. • In severe cases, anterior uveitis may be marked Treatment • Steroid eye drops with an antiviral cover (aciclovir 3%). • Steroids should be tapered over a period of several weeks. • When disciform keratitis is present with an infected epithelial ulcer, antiviral drugs should be started 5-7 days before the steroids. • Iritis: • Treated with a combination of topical steroids, topical antiviral drugs and cycloplegics. In Summary Epithelial keratitis due to active viral replication Treated with antivirals Stromal keratitis due to immune mechanism Treated with steroids Herpes zoster • Herpes zoster is caused by the same virus that causes chickenpox (varicella zoster virus). After an infection with chickenpox in childhood or youth the virus lies dormant Reactivation- particularly in elderly people with depressed cellular immunity, causing the clinical picture of zoster. • In zoster ophthalmicus the chief focus of infection is the Gasserian ganglion from where the virus travels down one or more of the branches of the ophthalmic division of the tiigeminal nerve, so that its area of distribution is marked out by rows of vesicles or the scars left by them. • Fever and malaise at the onset • Eruption is preceded by severe neuralgic pain along the course of the nerves. • Characteristic distribution of the lesions especially the strict limitation to one side of the midline of the head. • The vesicles often suppurate, bleed and cause small, permanent, pitted scars. • The Hutchinson's rule, which implies that ocular involvement is frequent if the side or tip of nose presents vesicles (cutaneous involvement of nasociliary nerve). Ocular lesions • Conjunctivitis • Zoster keratitis – Fine or coarse punctate epithelial keratitis. – Microdendritic epithelial ulcers – Nummular – Disciform keratitis occurs – Neuroparalytic ulceration – Exposure keratitis – Mucous plaque keratitis Microdendritic epithelial ulcers • Usually peripheral and stellate rather than exactly dendritic in shape. • Have tapered ends which lack bulbs. Nummular keratitis: multiple tiny granular deposits surrounded by a halo of stromal haze. • Episcleritis and scleritis • Iridocyclitis: hypopyon and hyphaema (acute haemorrhagic uveitis). • Acute retinal necrosis • Anterior segment necrosis and phthisis bulbi. • Secondary glaucoma neurological complications. • 1. Motor nerve palsies especially third, fourth, sixth and seventh. • 2. Optic neuritis • 3. Encephalitis Treatment • Systemic therapy for herpes zoster: • Oral antiviral drugs. – Acyclovir in a dose of 800 mg 5 times a day for 10 days, or – Valaciclovir in a dose of 500mg TDS • Analgesics. • Systemic steroids: neurological complications such as third nerve palsy and optic neuritis. • Cimetidine: to reduce pain and pruritis • Amitriptyline: to relieve the accompanying depression in acute phase • • • • Local therapy for ocular lesions For zoster keratitis, iridocyctitis and scleritis i. Topical steroid eye drops. ii. Cycloplegics such as cyclopentolate eyedrops or atropine eye ointment • iii. Topical acyclovir