| Literature DB >> 35243932 |
Erin NaPier1, Matthew Camacho1, Timothy F McDevitt2, Adam R Sweeney2.
Abstract
Neurotrophic keratopathy (NK), or neurotrophic keratitis, is a degenerative condition that results from decreased innervation to the cornea. The cornea is innervated by the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal nerve. Neurotrophic keratopathy is most commonly caused by herpes keratitis however, any condition that disrupts the normal corneal innervation can cause NK. Neurotrophic keratopathy is a clinical diagnosis and is classified into three stages based on the disease severity. Stage 1 has mild epithelial defects, such as punctate keratopathy, stage 2 disease has persistent epithelial defects, and stage 3 is defined by the presence of ulcers. Current treatment modalities consist of medical and surgical options. Stage 1 is treated with lubrication through artificial tears, eyelid taping, and punctal plug/cautery. Stage 2 treatment can involve therapeutic contact lenses, topical autologous or allogenic serum, tarsorrhaphy, botulinum toxin injections, and possibly anti-inflammatory medications. Stage 3 disease may require human nerve growth factor, amniotic membrane transplantation, conjunctival flap, or corneal neurotization. New therapies, such as matrix regenerating therapy, plasma rich in growth factors, Thymosin β4, Substance P/Insulin like growth factor-1, and nicergoline represent exciting future options.KEY MESSAGESNeurotrophic keratopathy is a rare degenerative disease defined by decreased innervation to the cornea that is associated with significant morbidity.Treatment options range from lubrication alone to various medical and surgical treatments.Matrix regenerating therapy, plasma rich in growth factors, Thymosin β4, Substance P/Insulin like growth factor-1, and nicergoline are exciting novel therapies that will influence how neurotrophic keratopathy is treated in the future.Entities:
Keywords: Mackie classification; Neurotrophic keratitis; autologous serum drops; corneal anaesthesia; corneal nerves; corneal ulcer; neurotization; neurotrophic keratopathy; novel therapies
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35243932 PMCID: PMC8903790 DOI: 10.1080/07853890.2022.2045035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Med ISSN: 0785-3890 Impact factor: 4.709
Causes of neurotrophic keratitis.
| Infections | HSV, HZV, Mycobacterium leprae |
|---|---|
| Ocular surface disease | Chronic blepharitis, Chemical burns, contact lens use, entropion, lattice and granular dystrophy, ocular trauma |
| Iatrogenic | Corneal surgery (laser-assisted |
| Medications | Anaesthetics, timolol, betaxolol, trifluridine, sulfacetamide, diclofenac sodium topical anaesthetics (timolol, betaxolol [ |
| CN V palsy | Neoplasm, aneurysm, facial trauma, surgery for trigeminal neuralgia |
| Systemic conditions | Diabetes, vitamin A deficiency, multiple sclerosis |
| Congenital/genetic | Riley day syndrome (family dysautonomia), moebius corneal hypoesthesia, goldenhar-gorlin syndrome, and congenital corneal anaesthesia [ |
| Other | Long term antipsychotic or antihistamine use, Adies syndrome, increasing age |
HSV: Herpes simplex virus; HZV: Herpes zoster virus.
Figure 1.Overview of clinical management of neurotrophic keratitis according to the stage of the condition.