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Uninvited Guests of the Cornea: Rare Corneal Infections Michael D. DePaolis, OD, FAAO Joseph P. Shovlin, OD, FAAO Several rare corneal pathogens causing infections in contact lens wearers have been identified. What make these infections so difficult to manage are often the late definitive diagnosis and the paucity of effective anti-microbial agents that impact a clinical cure. A timely diagnosis including appropriate differentials in contact lens wearers with ulcerative keratitis will be stressed along with a review of recent protocols for managing rare bacterial, fungal and protozoan infections of the eye. RISK FACTORS AND THE PATHOGENESIS OF ULCERATIVE KERATITIS IN CONTACT LENS WEARERS RISK FACTORS FOR BACTERIAL CORNEAL ULCERS EXOGENOUS: contact lenses, especially extended wear, contaminated cases and solutions, patching a contact lens abrasion; trauma including foreign body, chemical and thermal injury; previous ocular surgery including loose sutures; medicamentosa, contaminated medications and make-up. OCULAR ADNEXAL DYSFUNCTION: misdirection of lashes; abnormal lid anatomy & function; tear deficiencies, conjunctivitis; neuropathy involving cranial nerve(s) III, V and VII; blepharitis, canaliculitis/dacryocystitis. CORNEAL ABNORMALITIES: hypesthesia, bullous keratopathy, erosive disorders, viral keratitis. SYSTEMIC DISEASE: diabetes mellitus; debilitating illness, especially malnutrition or respirator dependence; collagen vascular disorders, substance abuse, mental illness; exfoliative skin disease; immunocompromised patient; atopic dermatitis, vitamin A or B deficiency. IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE THERAPY: systemic corticosteroids; topical immunosuppressive agents; systemic chemotherapy for malignancy, organ transplant or collagen vascular disease. FUNGAL AND PROTOZOAN INFECTIONS IN CONTACT LENS WEAR FUNGAL KERATITIS Fungi are primitive non-motile plant-like organisms. Yeast are uni-cellular and molds are multi-cellular filamentous structures. In the past 10 years there has been a definite increase in the prevalence of fungal keratitis in certain geographic areas, although nationwide there are probably only 300 cases per year. There are 40 different genera that cause keratomycoses; most are saprophytic. CLASSIFICATION/MOST COMMON ORGANISMS (Adapted from J. McCulley) Filamentous fungi; Molds Septate- most common cause of fungal keratitis, variable geographic distribution, mostly in the southern and southwestern United States,- Fusarium (most virulent due to complex enzymes + toxins), Aspergillus, Curvularia, Paecilomyces, Phialophora Non-septate- Mucoraceae (rare corneal pathogen) Risk Factors: corneal injury (frequently a tree branch or vegetative matter in an agricultural setting), soft contact lens wear (extended wear/therapeutic), chronic topical medication, systemic steroids, diabetes mellitus, radial keratotomy. CLINICAL FEATURES Epithelium Type of stromal inflammation Site of inflammation* Typical Atypical, severe intact or ulcerated non-suppurative, feathery infiltrate(s) focal or multi-focal, satellite infiltrates ulcerated suppurative diffuse *typically accompanied by a mild iritis, endothelial plaque and hypopyon in severe infections; hypopyon is of no diagnostic value Yeasts- worldwide distribution: Candida- C. albicans, C. parapsilosis, C. tropicalis Risk Factors- protracted ulceration of the epithelium, topical steroid therapy, penetrating keratoplasty, bandage soft lenses Epithelium Type of stromal inflammation Site of inflammation Typical, common Atypical, rare ulcerated suppurative intact non-suppurative focal or diffuse multifocal Note: ring infiltrates or abscess is possible with an intact epithelium KERATOMYCOSES DIAGNOSIS- clinical suspicion, corneal scraping, superficial keratectomy (paracentesis) Diagnostic stains- gram, Giemsa, GMS, PAS, KOH, acridine orange, Schwartzman’s, calcofluor white Culture media- Sabouraud dextrose agar (with gentamicin, without Confocal cyclohexamide), blood agar, brain-heart infusion agar with gentamicin @ 25 + 37 C microscopy- identifies hyphae, poor for Candida, a guide to therapeutic response ANTIFUNGAL DRUG MECHANISMS OF ACTION1. Sterol Binding- Polyene drugs like Amphotericin B, Nystatin and Natamycin 2. Inhibition of Sterol Synthesis- the Imidazoles including Miconazole, Ketoconazole, Clotrimazole, Fluconazole 3. Interference with RNA Synthesis- Flucytosine (fluorinated pyrimidine) and Itraconazole (antimetabolites) 4. Inhibition of Mitosis- Griseofulvin 5. Cationic Antiseptic- chlorhexidine INITIAL THERAPY- drugs are generally not introduced until definitive diagnosis is made. Topical*-HYPHAE-Natamycin 5% (Natacyn) suspension (every hr. for 2448 hrs.) YEAST OR PSEUDOHYPHAE- Amphotericin B .1-.5% (Fungizone) (every 15-20 minutes for 24-48 hrs.), Miconazole 1% (Micatin, Monistat) (every hr., but very toxic) as an alternate therapy. Clotrimazole (cream or powder) and Flucytosine (Ancobon tablets) converted to a 1% solution have been effective against Candida infection. Oral- Ketoconazole (Nizoral) (200-400 mg/day) or Fluconazole (Diflucan) (100-200 mg/day) [generally used for hyphae and endophthalmitis; Candida generally responds to topicals alone]; Itraconazole (Sporanox) is more effective against filamentous fungi especially Aspergilli .Reserve systemic treatment for deep keratitis, impending perforation, scleritis, endophthalmitis and post penetrating keratoplasty. Sub-conjunctival injection-Fluconazole (Diflucan) .5ml = 1mg daily pending initial response and identification of the organism. Other agents- atropine 1% or hyoscine .25% 4x/day; glaucoma medication as needed; role of collagen shield as a delivery device not well defined. Avoid steroids in fungal keratitis since mold/yeast replicate more freely and microbial agents are generally only fungistatic. *topicals are often continued for 6 wks. or longer; watch for toxicity Note: excimer ablation may be of some value unless there is deep penetration. PREVENTION-minimize extended wear, therapeutic lens application whenever possible, avoid indiscriminate use of topical steroids. ACANTHAMOEBA KERATITIS Acanthamoeba keratitis remained a curiosity in the past; however recently this pathogen affecting primarily the cornea and sclera is recognized with increased frequency. Early detection will alter the course of therapy and ultimately affect outcome, therefore early diagnosis is critical. The risks factors that have been identified by epidemiologic studies, specifically as they relate to contact lens wear will be examined. THE ORGANISM- "a free living" protozoan (motile) with worldwide distribution; isolated from fresh water, well water, sea and brackish water, sewage, hot tubs, air, soil, wheat and barley; there may be high incidence areas following disasters (ie. Sacramento floods and hurricane, "Hugo") Acanthamoeba: >7 species show ocular parasitology [A. castellani, A. quina, A. culbertsoni, A. lugdunesis, A. polyphaga, A. hatchetti, A. rysodes, A griffini] Note: Sequence types are recommended as much less ambiguous units of classification than currently used species names. Forms: cyst (sessile)*and trophozoite (motile) *makes the organism resistant to freezing, desiccation, standard chlorination and a variety of antimicrobial agents OCULAR INFECTION Clinical features-initial signs are non-specific; they include: patchy epithelial involvement (irregularity or pleomorphic focal or stellate epitheliopathy), suppurative/granulomatous or non-suppurative stromal keratitis, “bull’s eye” lesions, pseudo-guttata and iritis. More advanced signs include: a radial kerato-neuritis ("lightning flash"), ring infiltrate, nodular episcleritis, scleritis and hypopyon or hyphema; there may be a pseudo-membrane or adenopathy present. A remarkable lack of vascularization; is often the only feature to help differentiating this infection from herpes simplex. Recently, early signs identified include a bull’s-eye lesion and the appearance of randomly distributed white spots on the cornea. Persistent epithelial defects immediately following penetrating keratoplasty may signal early amoebic infection. Symptomatology-usually unilateral pain disparate to ocular findings, often history to trauma +/or contact lens wear, symptoms generally wax and wane over time with chronicity. LABORATORY CONFIRMATION Corneal scrapings*- examined with Giemsa or tri-chrome stains, also culture with heated killed E. coli on non-nutrient agar or activated charcoal/yeast extract; other valuable tests include immunofluorescent techniques which include: calcofluor white and indirect immunofluorescent antibody testing. Standard culture negativity for bacteria, fungi, and virus expected. Cysts can sometimes be seen on soft lenses with high magnification. Confocal microscopy is an aid to early differential diagnosis, and the infection produces a "lightning flash" appearance at the radial nerve infiltrates. Polymerase chain reaction may be more sensitive than cultures as a diagnostic test. PCR analysis of the tears and epithelium may prove a useful tool in confirming an early diagnosis. *biopsy with intact epithelium or graft histology THERAPY Reported improvement*Antibiotic/Aminoglycoside: paromomycin (Humatin), neomycin Antifungal: clotrimazole, ketoconazole (Nizoral), itraconazole (Sporanox), miconazole (Monistat, Micatin), fluconazole (Diflucon) Antiparasitic/Aromatic Diamidine: propamidine isethionate (Brolene), hydroxystilbamidine (Pentamidine),hexamidine di-isethionate (Desomedine) Biocide/Cationic Antiseptic: polyhexamethylene biquanide (PHMB, Baquacil, Cosmocil), chlorhexidine digluconate, povidone-iodine (Betadine) *use one agent from the biocide/cationic antiseptic group plus one or more from the above list, for recalcitrants with significant ocular toxicity use drops in a three day cycle (hexamidine, paromomycin, and either PHMB or chlorhexidine Supportive and adjunct therapy-debridement, conjunctival flaps, bandage lenses, debulking procedures, cryotherapy and steroids with caution**; grafts show a high recrudescence (NSAIDs seem to have little benefit in pain reduction when radial keratoneuritis is present) **inhibits metamorphogenesis and increases pathogenicity by accelerating trophozoite proliferation Success has been reported by Seals (1995) using .02% chlorhexidine digluconate & .1% propamidine isethionate has been reported. CONTACT LENS RELATED RISK FACTORS/ PREVENTION Accouterment- use of distilled water, tap/well water*, or saliva; bacterial contamination of case and care system a common factor *recent concern especially with rigid lens wear Disinfection- some resistance to chemical disinfection Corneal trauma- hypoxia, mechanical trauma with lens wear Note: should avoid swimming and using hot tubs with contact lens wear ADDITIONAL PROTOZOAN Other amoeba- A similar infection may be caused by another amoeba besides Acanthamoeba, such as Naegleria, Hartmanella or Vahlkampfiid. Microsporidia- an obligate intracellular protozoan recently found on corneal scrapings of HIV infected patients from nasopharyngeal or urinary colonization. Generally it presents as a superficial punctate, multifocal keratitis (may be confined to the superficial cornea for months) in immuno-incompetent patients (genus-Encephalitozoon); a stromal keratitis is possible following trauma especially in immunocompetent individuals (genusNosema). A slight improvement has been noted with trimethoprim/sulfisoxazole. Recently itraconazole, propamidine isethionate, albendazole (benzimidazole), and especially topical fumagillin bicyclohexylammonium salt (Fumadil B), a bacteriostatic antibiotic secreted by Aspergillus, have shown some promise. Diagnosis is made by Gram’s stain, cytology with chromotrope-based stain, or by using electron or confocal microscopy. TRANSCRIPT QUALITY COURSE QUESTIONS- UN-INVITED GUESTS OF THE CORNEA 1. Microsporidia are obligate parasites found on corneal scraping of some HIV infected patients? 2. Chlorhexidine digluconate and propamidine isethionate used in combination have shown a clinical cure in some patients with acanthamoeba keratitis? 3. Fusarium keratitis is considered the most virulent of the fungal infections of the cornea due to the complex enzymes and toxins that are produced? 4. Although not an approved antifungal, Amphotericin B, is the suggested topical of choice in the initial treatment of yeast related keratitis? 5. Corneal injury in an agricultural setting increases the risk of acquiring a keratomycotic infection? ANSWERS: 1. T 2. T 3. T 4. T 5. T