keratitis Flashcards

1
Q

what are the bacterial causes of keratitis?

A

Staph aureus, Strep pyogenes, Strep pneumoniae, Pseudomonas (Pseudomonas is most common cause of contact lens related corneal ulcers)

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2
Q

what are the viral causes of keratitis?

A

HSV-1, herpes zoster (varicella VZV)

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3
Q

what are the fungal causes of keratitis?

A

andida (yeast), fusarium (filamentous), microsporidia

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4
Q

what are the protozoal causes of keratitis?

A

Acanthamoeba

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5
Q

what are the symptoms of keratitis?

A
  • Pain/discomfort
  • Red eye
  • Blurring of vision (BOV)
  • Discharge (watery or mucopurulent)
  • Photophobia
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6
Q

what are the risk factors for developing bacterial keratitis?

A
  • 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)
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7
Q

what are the risk factors for developing fungal keratitis?

A
  • Trauma: particularly with organic matter
  • Contact lens wear
  • Immunocompromised host
  • Previous topical steroid use
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8
Q

what are the signs in epithelial herpes simplex keratitis?

A
  • **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
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9
Q

what is the treatment for herpes simplex keratitis?

A
  • 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)
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10
Q

what are the investigations for bacterial keratitis?

A

Corneal scrapings for gram stain & culture (blood, chocolate, Saboraud)

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11
Q

what are the signs of bacterial keratitis?

A
  • Conjunctival injection
  • Corneal ulcer w/ surrounding corneal oedema
  • In severe cases -> anterior uveitis + hypopyon (accumulation of WBC in the anterior chamber 2’ intense inflammation)
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12
Q

what is the management for bacterial keratitis?

A
  • 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)
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13
Q

what are the signs of fungal keratitis?

A
  • Infiltrate with irregular feathery margins

- Multifocal, satellite lesions

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14
Q

what are the complications of keratitis?

A
  • , 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)
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