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Query: UMLS:C0022568 (keratitis)
5,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Since about 1950 especially, dermatologists world-wide have been utilizing the positive side-effects, discovered by chance, of all groups of antibiotic and antimicrobial drugs. These drugs are used to treat certain non-microbially induced dermatoses, without any knowledge of the mechanisms involved. A short history is given and the most important drugs and the indications for their use are described. The following drugs are undoubtedly effective and sometimes even the therapy of choice: tetracyclines in acne vulgaris and rosacea (including rosacea keratitis); penicillin G in acrodermatitis atrophicans and cold urticaria; dapsone in dermatitis herpetiformis and - as a powerful adjuvant - in acne vulgaris and rosacea. Before the discovery of the socalled immunodepressive drugs, tetracycline was the only alternative to - or at least a highly effective adjuvant of - cortisone in dermatomyositis and chloroquine in localised and systemic lupus erythematosus. Finally, clioquinole was life-saving in acrodermatitis continua in children until this condition was recently identified as a zinc-deficiency syndrome. Therapeutical mechanisms have been found only in the case of acne, rosacea and dermatitis herpetiformis. In most other diseases the nature of the therapeutical effectiveness of antibiotic and antimicrobial drugs still remains a mystery.
Infection 1979
PMID:[Positive side-effects of antibiotic and antimicrobial drugs in therapy (author's transl)]. 16 43

One hundred and seven outbreaks of dendritic keratitis have been registered by the ophthalmologists over a 2-year-period in a region with a population of approximately 446 000 persons. The incidence was found to be 12/100 000/year. The average age of our sample was 46.5 years with the same age distribution for males and females, and with a non-significant predominance of males. No seasonal variation of dendritic keratitis was observed. 50% of the patients had previously suffered from dendritic keratitis. In 25% of the patients the onset of the disease had been preceded by an infectious disease, while 6% were on local steroid therapy for non-dendritic eye diseases prior to the dendritic outbreak.
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PMID:Keratitis dendritica. An epidemiological investigation. 52 98

Athymic (nude) mice have played an important role in defining the function of the immune system and its role in infectious diseases. In the majority of these studies, heterozygous +/nu mice have been used as normal controls for the nu/nu mice, and it has been assumed that +/nu mice have essentially normal immune systems. We have compared the response of +/+, +/nu and nu/nu BALB/c mice following ocular infection with HSV-1 and have found that +/nu mice develop significantly more severe blepharitis, vascularization of the cornea, stromal keratitis and extraocular disease (herpetiform spread) than +/+ BALB/c mice. The extraocular disease was particularly severe in the +/nu mice, suggesting that factors regulating herpetiform spread of the virus are deficient in these mice. Susceptibility to lethal encephalitis did not differ between +/+ and +/nu mice. These results suggest that significant differences exist in the response to ocular HSV infection between +/+ and +/nu mice.
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PMID:Susceptibility of +/+, +/nu and nu/nu BALB/c mice to ocular herpes simplex virus infection. 128 12

Although varicella is one of the most common infectious diseases in the United States, systemic and ocular complications are rare. We report a patient who developed disciform edema followed by microdendritic keratitis 1 and 2 months, respectively, after resolution of the acute phase of varicella. Cultures were negative, but serologic analysis found positive antibodies against varicella zoster virus and negative antibodies against herpes simplex virus. Based on this case and on a review of the literature, we believe that this delayed onset of keratitis represents a distinct category of varicella corneal complications.
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PMID:Delayed onset of varicella keratitis. 133 Apr 39

Infection on the snout with HSV-1 in mice with normal corneas produced a mild ocular disease, characterized by a zosteriform skin lesion around the eye, enlargement of the pupil, hyperemia of the iris and, sporadically, transient keratitis. By contrast, snout infection after prior cauterization of the cornea induced significantly more frequent and more severe corneal disease, in which keratitis was usually permanent. Corneal cauterization also produced increased numbers of Langerhans cells in the central cornea. We speculate that the combination of virus and increased numbers of Langerhans cells within the cornea may lead to an exaggerated ocular immune response that is destructive to the cornea.
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PMID:Herpetic stromal keratitis in mice: less reversibility in the presence of Langerhans cells in the central cornea. 165 Jun 75

The use of corticosteroids in the management of infectious eye disease is controversial. In this study, the authors attempt to analyze the goals and risks of the use of corticosteroids in the treatment of various forms of infectious keratitis with reference to generally recognized principles for the treatment of infectious diseases. Existing clinical and research data are reviewed in this context to make appropriate recommendations for the use of corticosteroids in the treatment of bacterial, fungal, and acanthamoeba keratitis. The authors conclude that corticosteroids are definitely contraindicated in the treatment of fungal keratitis, and relatively contraindicated in the treatment of Acanthamoeba keratitis. Topical corticosteroid therapy may have a role in the treatment of bacterial keratitis if appropriate guidelines are followed.
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PMID:Use of corticosteroids in combination with antimicrobial drugs in the treatment of infectious corneal disease. 186 34

Recurrent keratomycosis is reported due to the coelomycete Sphaeropsis subglobosa, which has not been recognised previously as a human pathogen. Infection followed corneal injury by a frayed bamboo cane with implantation of its splinters. Initial successful therapy with 2% clotrimazole topically, to which it was sensitive, was followed by recurrent infection after 39 months, initially a keratitis but progressing to an endophthalmitis. Penetrating keratoplasty was necessary to eradicate the infection. Further isolation of the fungus showed that it had not developed resistance to clotrimazole but had survived dormant, deep in the corneal stroma. S. subglobosa should be considered in bamboo-associated and horticultural injuries.
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PMID:Sphaeropsis subglobosa keratomycosis--first reported case. 201 15

Infection by FHV-1 is one of the most common ophthalmic diseases of domestic cats worldwide. Although the usual manifestations are conjunctivitis and keratitis, infection with this virus has been linked to a variety of other ophthalmic syndromes of cats, including keratoconjunctivitis sicca and corneal sequestration. Ocular FHV-1 infection of cats provides a significant diagnostic challenge to the practicing veterinarian because, in chronic cases, antigen detection tests often yield negative results. Although therapy for FHV-1 infections of cats is often difficult, the recent development of nontoxic antiviral drugs that demonstrate considerable efficacy against FHV-1 offers hope for improved therapeutic success in the future.
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PMID:Feline herpesvirus ocular disease. 216 58

In the late 1980s, HIV seroprevalence in Rwanda stood at 17.8% in urban areas and 1.3% in rural areas. Adult symptoms of AIDS are generally different than those of children. For example, worldwide, the most prevalent symptom (about 50% of patients) of HIV infection among adults is cotton wool spots, fluffy white superficial retinal lesions. In a sample of 110 seropositive children in Rwanda, however, cotton wool spots' prevalence was very low (.9%). Further, 20-40% of all AIDs patients worldwide experience small retinal hemorrhages (.8% for 110 seropositive children in Rwanda), an advanced stage of microvasculopathy, 8% of the children had other microvascular conditions. Researchers have isolated HIV in the aqueous humor of 3 patients in Rwanda with retinal perivasculitis indicating that it may contribute to this disease's etiology. Moreover, 46% of the Rwandan children with AIDs experienced perivasculitis and/or sheathing. HIV has also been found in tears, the conjunctiva, the cornea, the retinal vascular endothelium, and from multiple ocular tissues. Even though cytomegalovirus retinitis is the leading opportunistic infection (26%- 40%) of the eye and the major cause of blindness among AIDS patients in Europe and the US, it only appeared in 5% of AIDS patients in a Rwandan study. Physicians have found herpes simplex keratitis to be more resistant to treatment and recurred more often in AIDS patients than in immunocompetent patients. They have also learned that other infectious diseases of the eyes manifest themselves differently between the 2 groups. Kaposi's sarcoma, B-cell lymphoma, and squamous cell carcinoma are often present in patients with AIDS.
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PMID:Ocular problems in AIDS. 218 17

To identify causes of mortality in young captive crocodiles, detailed necropsy and laboratory examination was done on 54 (30 Crocodylus porosus, 22 C. novaeguineae, 2 of unrecorded species). Although multiple infections often confounded interpretation it was concluded that the major infectious diseases, of approximately equal importance, were coccidiosis, bacterial septicaemia with Gram-negative organisms, and metazoan parasitism including ascariasis and pentastomiasis. A range of other lesions and agents was recognised, including keratitis, enteritis of unknown aetiology, non-suppurative encephalitis, traumatic peritonitis and trematodes located in renal tubules, gut and blood vessels. Some crocodiles in poor condition had only mild lesions associated with metazoan parasites and the cause of death or illness could not be clearly determined, although it was considered likely that adaptation failure was a contributing factor.
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PMID:Diseases of young captive crocodiles in Papua New Guinea. 226 4


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