| Literature DB >> 28630792 |
Ayşe Bozkurt Oflaz1, Banu Bozkurt1, Ümit Kamış1, Bengü Ekinci Köktekir1.
Abstract
Bacterial keratitis is a serious ocular infectious disease that can threaten vision. The disease generally progresses rapidly and can lead to corneal scar, stromal abscess formation, perforation, and dissemination to adjacent tissues if not treated properly. Recent studies showed that corneal collagen crosslinking (CCC) using ultraviolet-A/riboflavin is effective in the treatment of bacterial keratitis refractory to topical antibiotic treatment. In addition to being bactericidal, CCC also decreases risk of perforation by strengthening the corneal collagen structure. Herein, we report a male patient with Streptococcus pneumonia keratitis 6 months after a keratoplasty procedure, which did not respond to fortified topical antibiotic therapy and was treated successfully with riboflavin/ultraviolet-A CCC. His pain decreased remarkably in a few days. The corneal epithelial defect healed and infiltration regressed within 2 weeks after CCC. His vision improved significantly from hand movement to 20/400. CCC might be used as adjuvant treatment in bacterial keratitis refractory to medical treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial keratitis; corneal collagen crosslinking; ultraviolet-A/riboflavin
Year: 2017 PMID: 28630792 PMCID: PMC5468530 DOI: 10.4274/tjo.98470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Turk J Ophthalmol ISSN: 2149-8709
Figure 1Infiltration in the center of the corneal graft, conjunctival hyperemia, and purulent secretion
Figure 2Corneal infiltration progressed and a large epithelial defect and peripheral corneal neovascularization developed despite topical fortified antibiotic therapy
Figure 3Examination at 1 day (a) and 1 week (b) after corneal collagen crosslinking revealed that the corneal infiltration diminished in size and split into two foci, the surrounding corneal tissue regained transparency, and the epithelial defect became smaller
Figure 4At 1 month after the corneal collagen crosslinking procedure, the corneal infiltrate and epithelial defect had resolved and there was slack in the corneal sutures
Figure 5At 6 weeks after the corneal collagen crosslinking procedure, the corneal sutures were removed, peripheral corneal neovascularization had regressed, and corneal opacity was reduced