| Literature DB >> 28969610 |
Jing Zhong1, Xingyi Li1, Yuqing Deng1, Ling Chen1, Shiyou Zhou1, Weilan Huang2, Shiqi Lin2, Jin Yuan3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To analyse the associated factors, diagnosis, clinical manifestations and therapeutic effects of Acanthamoeba keratitis at a tertiary ophthalmic centre in Southern China.Entities:
Keywords: Acanthamoeba keratitis; Associated factors; Diagnosis; Keratoplasty
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28969610 PMCID: PMC5625641 DOI: 10.1186/s12886-017-0571-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
General information and clinical diagnoses in the included patients
| Case no. | Sex | Age (y) | Profession | Eye | Risk Factor | Disease course | Initial diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | Female | 55 | Actress | Left | Eye exposure to cosmetics | 4 m | AK |
| P2 | Male | 44 | Fisherman | Left | Eye exposure to fish pond water | 20d | AK |
| P3 | Male | 60 | Farmer | Right | Mosquito entering into the eye | 2 m | FK |
| P4 | Female | 23 | Clerk | Right | Wearing contact lenses | 1 m | HSK |
| P5 | Male | 52 | Farmer | Left | Hit with an iron wire | 2 m | FK |
| P6 | Male | 49 | Farmer | Left | Eye exposed to paddy field water | 45d | AK |
| P7 | Female | 59 | Farmer | Right | Winged insect in the eye | 1 m | AK |
| P8 | Male | 39 | Upfitter | Right | Eye exposed to cement | 2 m | FK |
| P9 | Male | 28 | Fisherman | Left | Unclear | 40d | HSK |
| P10 | Male | 37 | Farmer | Right | Unclear | 1 m | BK |
| P11 | Male | 19 | Worker | Right | Eye exposed to foul water | 1 m | AK |
| P12 | Male | 63 | Farmer | Left | Injured by a stick | 2 m | FK |
| P13 | Male | 37 | Farmer | Right | Injured by a stick | 1.5 m | FK |
| P14 | Female | 39 | Farmer | Left | Injured by a stick | 3 m | FK |
| P15 | Female | 30 | Worker | Right | Injured by a pencil | 2 m | FK |
P1 = Patient 1, P2 = Patient 2…P15 = Patient 15; AK Acanthamoeba keratitis, FK fungal keratitis, BK bacterial keratitis, HSK herpes simplex keratitis
Fig. 1Acanthamoeba keratitis is characterized by ring-like stromal infiltrates and corneal lesions (a). The cornea is relatively translucent in the centre of the ring infiltrates (b). Coinfection with fungi or bacteria contributes to variability and atypical symptoms. A cornea was infected with Acanthamoeba and Aspergillus (c). A cornea infected with Acanthamoeba, Mucor and E. coli (d)
Laboratory tests performed in the patients
| Case no. | Confocal Scan (pre-surgery) | Microbiologic smear and culture (pre-surgery) | Histopathology (post-surgery) |
|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | Amoebic cysts |
| (−) |
| P2 | Amoebic cysts |
|
|
| P3 | (−) | (−) |
|
| P4 | (−) | (−) |
|
| P5 | (−) | (−) |
|
| P6 | Amoebic trophozoites |
|
|
| P7 | Amoebic trophozoites |
|
|
| P8 | (−) | (−) |
|
| P9 | (−) | (−) |
|
| P10 | (−) | (−) |
|
| P11 | Amoebic trophozoites | (−) | (−) |
| P12 | (−) | (−) |
|
| P13 | (−) | (−) |
|
| P14 | (−) | (−) |
|
| P15 | (−) | (−) |
|
Fig. 2Pathological sections stained with HE revealed corneal oedema and amoebic cysts among the corneal collagenous fibres (blue arrow) (a-b). Numerous polymorphonuclear and mononucleated cells and nuclear debris had infiltrated the corneal stroma (c). Amoebic cysts and trophozoites were detected in the cornea (blue arrow) using PASM staining. Aspergillus hyphae (deep blue arrow) had fragmented in a coinfected case (d) (20 × 20)
Fig. 3A moderately infected case (a) that was treated with conventional penetrating keratoplasty. The graft was transparent, and the depth of the anterior chamber was normal after six months (b). A seriously infected case (c) that was treated with large corneo-scleral penetrating keratoplasty. The donor cornea was clear after one month (d)
Preoperative condition and postoperative follow-up data
| Case no. | Preoperative vision lo | Size of lesion (mm) | Surgery | Postoperative BCVA (2w) | Postoperative BCVA (final visit) | Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P2 | 2.301 (20/4000) | 8 | PKP | 1.602 (5/200) | 1.301(10/200) | Ocular hypertension; Hyphaema |
| P3 | 2.301 (20/4000) | 7 | PKP | 0.477 (20/60) | 2.301 (20/4000) | Ocular hypertension; Hyphaema; Corneal graft |
| P4 | 2.301 (20/4000) | 5 | PKP | 0.400 (20/50) | 0.400 (20/50) | – |
| P5 | 2.301 (20/4000) | 8 | PKP | 2.301 (20/4000) | 1.602 (5/200) | Hyphaema |
| P6 | 1.380 (8/200) | 3 | PKP | 1.000 (20/200) | 0.400 (20/50) | – |
| P7 | 2.602 (20/8000) | 8 | PKP | 2.602 (20/8000) | 2.602(20/8000) | Corneal graft rejection |
| P8 | 2.602 (20/8000) | Perforation | PKP | 2.602 (20/8000) | 2.301 (20/4000) | Ocular hypertension; Hyphaema |
| P9 | 2.301 (20/4000) | 9 | PKP | 0.700 (20/100) | 0.700 (20/100) | Corneal graft rejection; Second set transplantation |
| P10 | 2.602 (20/8000) | Perforation | PKP | 2.602 (20/8000) | 2.301 (20/4000) | – |
| P12 | 2.000 (20/2000) | 7 | PKP | 0.700 (20/100) | 0.400 (20/50) | – |
| P13 | 2.000 (20/2000) | 8 | PKP | 1.602 (5/200) | 0.700 (20/100) | – |
| P14 | 2.301 (20/4000) | 8 | PKP | 2.000 (20/2000) | 0.400 (20/50) | – |
| P15 | 2.301 (20/4000) | 6 | PKP | 0.700 (20/100) | 0.400 (20/50) | Transient ocular hypertension |
Fig. 4Pre- and post-operative logMAR best corrected visual acuity of the patients. The data are shown as the mean ± SEM. *, p < 0.05; **, p < 0.01; and ***, p < 0.001