keratitis Flashcards
what are the bacterial causes of keratitis?
Staph aureus, Strep pyogenes, Strep pneumoniae, Pseudomonas (Pseudomonas is most common cause of contact lens related corneal ulcers)
what are the viral causes of keratitis?
HSV-1, herpes zoster (varicella VZV)
what are the fungal causes of keratitis?
andida (yeast), fusarium (filamentous), microsporidia
what are the protozoal causes of keratitis?
Acanthamoeba
what are the symptoms of keratitis?
- Pain/discomfort
- Red eye
- Blurring of vision (BOV)
- Discharge (watery or mucopurulent)
- Photophobia
what are the risk factors for developing bacterial keratitis?
- Trauma, recent ocular surgery involving cornea (e.g. laser refractive surgery, LASIK, corneal transplant surgery)
- Pre-existing chronic corneal disease e.g. Neurotrophic keratopathy, exposure keratopathy
- Contact lens wear (biggest risk factor)
what are the risk factors for developing fungal keratitis?
- Trauma: particularly with organic matter
- Contact lens wear
- Immunocompromised host
- Previous topical steroid use
what are the signs in epithelial herpes simplex keratitis?
- **Dendritic ulcer (caused by viral replication): linear, branching ulcer, each branch terminating w bulb
- coalesces, i.e. larger epithelial defect, usually in immunosuppressed pts
- metaherpetic if follows dendritic/geographic ulcer that failed to heal
- **Hallmark: Reduced corneal sensation (tested with a cotton swab): HSV uses cellular enzymes of ganglion cells for replication; and the ganglion cells die when HSV is released 🡪 loss of ganglion cells from recurrent infections lead to decreased corneal sensation
- Vesicular rash near the orbit
what is the treatment for herpes simplex keratitis?
- topical 3% acyclovir ointment 5x/day for 10-14 days, avoid topical steroids (increases viral replication)
- Skin involvement is treated with 5% acyclovir (higher concentration)
what are the investigations for bacterial keratitis?
Corneal scrapings for gram stain & culture (blood, chocolate, Saboraud)
what are the signs of bacterial keratitis?
- Conjunctival injection
- Corneal ulcer w/ surrounding corneal oedema
- In severe cases -> anterior uveitis + hypopyon (accumulation of WBC in the anterior chamber 2’ intense inflammation)
what is the management for bacterial keratitis?
- Empirical broad spectrum fortified intensive topical abx (cefazolin & gentamicin), subsequently modified based on culture & sensitivity results
- Systemic antibiotics if scleral involvement, severe corneal thinning w/ threatened corneal perforation, and potential for systemic involvement (Neisseria meningitidis /gonorrhoeae, Haemophilus influenzae)
- Manage predisposing factors (e.g. strictly no contact lens wear)
what are the signs of fungal keratitis?
- Infiltrate with irregular feathery margins
- Multifocal, satellite lesions
what are the complications of keratitis?
- , residual corneal scarring, irregular astigmatism, loss of vision, corneal perforation, and endophthalmitis
- Posterior synechiae (iris adhering to lens due to infection in anterior chamber)
- Secondary acute closure glaucoma if posterior synechiae causes a pupil block
- Cycloplegic spasm (spasm of ciliary muscle of eye)