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Diseases of the Cornea.

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Presentation on theme: "Diseases of the Cornea."— Presentation transcript:

1 Diseases of the Cornea

2 Keratitis Infectious Physical Bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae)
Bacterial (Pseudomonas aeruginosa) Fungal Herpes simplex Physical Abrasion

3 Bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae)
Streptococcus pneumoniae: lancet-shaped, encapsulated, gram + diplococci Serpingous, gray-white stromal infiltrate and hypopyon (pus) Distinct borders with overhanging edges; usually with overhanging defect or ulcer Suppuration not usually extend over the entire corneal surface Sterile hypopyon is common

4 Bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae)

5 Bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae)
History of the patient: trauma or URTI for 5-7 days Pneumococcal ulcer manifests hrs after inoculation of the abraded cornea Spread erratically from original site towards the center Advancing border shows active ulceration as the trailing border begins to heal  acute serpingous ulcer Superficial corneal layers involved first then the deep parenchyma

6 Bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae)
Topical erythromycin Chloramphenicol 4th gen fluroquinolones (Moxifloxacin and Gatifloxacin) Oral cephalosporins and erythromycin Concurrent dacrocystitis and nasolacrimal duct obstruction should be treated

7 Bacterial (Pseudomonas aeruginosa)
Gram (-) corneal ulcer Rapid evolution; marked tendency to spread Common among immunocompromised, soft contact lens with faulty hygiene, contaminated fluorescein solution or eye drops

8 Bacterial (Pseudomonas aeruginosa)

9 Bacterial (Pseudomonas aeruginosa)
Begins as a gray or yellow mucopurulent discharge adherent to ulcer surface  bluish green Ulcer is diffused with uniform penetration  severe pain More discharge Opacification and edema around the ulcer Rapid stromal necrosis due to proteolytic enzymes Corneal perforation and severe intraocular infection

10 Bacterial (Pseudomonas aeruginosa)
Moxifloxacin, Gatifloxacin, Ciprofloxacin, Tobramycin, Gentamycin Other fluoroquinolones, polymyxin B or carbenicillin

11 Fungal Keratitis Indolent or slow-type (usually months) Filamentous
Gray white Feathery border Satellite infiltrates Deep: endothelial plaque Yeast Focal Dense suppuration similar to Pneumococcus

12 Fungal Keratitis Intense suppuration, progressive hypopyon
Anterior chamber membranes Gray infiltrate with irregular edges Marked inflammation of the globe with superficial ulceration Endothelial plaque with corneal abscess

13 Fungal Keratitis

14 Fungal Keratitis Candida, Fusarium, Aspergillus, Penicillium, Cephalosporium Except Candida: Hyphal elements Candida: pseudohyphae or budding

15 Fungal Keratitis No effective topical agent
Combination of anti-fungal tablets (Amikacin, Cefaxolin, Gentamicin, Neomycin, etc) Oral tablets (Amphotericin B with saline) dropped every 5 mins Debridement to remove dead tissue and to increase drug absoprtion Candida: Natamycin, Ketoconazole, Voriconazole, Amphotericin B

16 Herpes simplex Keratitis
Discrete punctate epithelial keratitis  coalesce into branching or dendritic lesion (swollen, opaque epithelial cells) Terminal bulbs Ulcer in the center of dendrite due to lysis and desanquamation of infected cells Centrifugal spread (center to peripheral)  geographic ulcer

17 Herpes simplex Keratitis

18 Herpes simplex Keratitis
Usually among young children Mild stromal edema and subepitelial infiltrates Irritation, photophobia, tearing If central cornea affected  reduction in vision Can have fever, blisters

19 Herpes simplex Keratitis
Debridement Idoxuridine, Trifluridine, Vidarabine, Acyclovir Penetrating keratoplasty: only for inactive infections Control reactivation of HSV infection Aspirin for fever Avoid exposure to ultraviolet light Prophylactic antivirals

20 Corneal Abrasion Scraping of the superficial part that may heal in a matter of hours Acute pain after trauma Photophobia, tearing, blepharospasm (eyelid spasm), foreign body sensation, blurred vision Adjacent cells expand and fill the defect  basal epithelial cells undergoes mitosis Patching/bandage, topical antibiotics, cycloplegic

21 Corneal Abrasion

22 Glaucoma

23 Glaucoma (Acute angle closure)
True emergency!! Route of aqueous humor: cilliary body  drains anteriorly from iris  pupil  canal of Schlemm Occlusion at the anterior chamber angle by the peripheral iris  increase IOP Pupillary block: from posterior to anterior chamber  peripheral iris balloon forward Plateau iris: peripheral iris lax  contact with the angle

24 Glaucoma (Acute angle closure)
Ocular pain, headache Unilateral blurring of vision Iridescent vision (halos) Nausea and vomiting Redness

25 Glaucoma (Acute angle closure)
Elevated IOP (60-80 mmHg)  on tonometry “rock hard” Deep circumlimbal conjunctiva and episcleral injection  ciliary flush Fixed, mid-dilated pupil Edematous or steamy cornea Shallow anterior chamber Thinning out or excavation of optic disc “glaucomatous cupping”  chronic cases

26 Glaucoma (Acute angle closure)

27 Glaucoma (Acute angle closure)
Increased IOP  acute ischemic changes in iris  corneal edema  optic nerve damage Primary open-angle glaucoma IOP doesn’t increase >30 mmHg Retinal damage develops over a period of time Normal-tension glaucoma Retinal ganglion cells susceptible to changes in IOP Optic nerve ischemia

28 Glaucoma (Acute angle closure)
Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors Hyperosmotic agents Oral glycerin IV mannitol Pilocarpine Supportive: corticostroids, analgesics

29 Uveitis

30 Uveitis (Iridocyclitis)
Anterior chamber Inflammation of the iris, ciliary body, choroid Deep, dull pain Photophobia may be severe Ciliary body controls the opening and closing of the iris muscles Tearing

31 Uveitis (Iridocyclitis)
Visual acuity not significantly impaired Reading difficulty Ciliary flush Mildly edematous cornea Sterile hypopyon if severe

32 Uveitis (Iridocyclitis)
Hallmark: cells and flare Cells Leukocytes floating in aqueous Flare Protein from inflamed iris or ciliary body Keratic precipitates (clumps of white cells and inflamatory debris) in active inflammation Koeppe nodules (granulomatous nodules in iris) Busacca nodules (within iris stroma) Berlin’s nodules (anterior chamber angle)

33 Uveitis (Iridocyclitis)

34 Uveitis (Iridocyclitis)
Underlying systemic disease TB, Ankylosing spondylitis, Behcet’s syndrome, JRA, syphilis Treatment Immobilize iris and ciliary body to decrease pain Cycloplegia (atropine, cyclopentolate) Topical steroids Treat underlying systemic disease


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