Keratitis III
Keratitis III
Keratitis III
Healed Keratocele
Hypopyon Ulcer
Types
Corneal Ulcer (Superficial Purulent Keratitis)
with Hypopyon
Ulcer Serpen
Hypopyon Ulcer
Introduction
Etiology
Predisposing Factors
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Organisms
Hypopyon Ulcer
Ulcus Serpen
Symptoms
Signs
Signs
Complications
Treatment
Fungal Keratitis
Fungal Keratitis
Fungal keratitis is challenging corneal disease and
presents as very difficult form bacterial keratitis.
Difficulty arise in making correct clinical and
laboratory diagnosis. The treatment of fungal keratitis
is also difficult due to poor availability of antifungal
drugs and delay in starting treatment.
Treatment is required on long term basis, intensively
and often cases require therapeutic keratoplasty.
Fungal Keratitis
Fungal Keratitis
Risk Factors
1.
2.
Risk Factors
3. Systemic use of steroids
4. Corneal surgeries (Penetrating keratoplasty,
refractive surgery)
5. Chronic keratitis (herpes simplex, herpes
zoster, Vernal or allergic keratoconjunctivitis,
and neurotrophic ulcer)
6. Diabetes , Chronically ill / hospitalised
patients, AIDS and leprosy
Causative fungi
I.
II.
Causative fungi
III. Filamentous non-septated : Mucor and
Rhizopus species
IV. Diphasic forms: Histoplasma, Coccidiodes,
Blastomyces
Clinical Features
Symptoms
Onset is slow
Symptoms are less compared to signs
Diminution of vision, pain, foreign body
sensation
Signs
Signs
Satellite lesions
Brown pigmentation due to dematiaceous
fungus (Curvularia lunata)
Intact epithelium with stromal infiltrates
Anterior chamber reaction
Fungal Keratitis
Laboratory Diagnosis
Treatment
Treatment
Surgical Treatment
1.
2.
3.
Surgical Treatment