| Literature DB >> 20689204 |
Vikas Mittal1, Ruchi Mittal, P C Sharma.
Abstract
A 44-year-old man presented 28 days after cataract surgery (phacoemulsification) in right eye with multiple pinpoint infiltrates in posterior stroma at cataract surgery wound site. Visual acuity was 20/60. Corneal scraping from the floor of the corneal tunnel revealed fungus which was later identified to be Aspergillus flavus. The patient was started on oral voriconazole 200 mg twice daily and topical voriconazole 1% every hour. Two intracameral injections of voriconazole (50 micrograms/ 0.1 ml) were given 72 h apart, five days after starting initial therapy. Infiltrates increased in size and density in spite of 20 days of voriconazole therapy. Full-thickness patch graft was done to arrest progressive necrosis. Four months after surgery, patient had 20/60 best-corrected visual acuity. There was no recurrence in one-year follow-up. Present case illustrates the therapeutic challenge in fungal tunnel infections and possibility of voriconazole-resistant Aspergillus species.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20689204 PMCID: PMC2992924 DOI: 10.4103/0301-4738.67072
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Ophthalmol ISSN: 0301-4738 Impact factor: 1.848
Figure 1First presentation (28 days post phacoemulsification). Infiltrate: 2 mm × 3.4 mm; posterior stromal
Figure 2After five days of voriconazole therapy. Infiltrate: 2.6 mm ×4 mm; mid to posterior stromal
Figure 3After 20 days of voriconazole therapy. Infiltrate: 3.1 mm X 4.5 mm; full stromal thickness
Figure 4Four months after full-thickness patch graft