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

The limulus lysate assay is an inexpensive, reliable, and rapid means of detecting and presence of Gram-negative endotoxin. In all ten cases of experimentally induced Proteus endophthalmitis in rabbits, the assay was positive, and the assay was appropriately negative in all ten cases of Staphylococcal endophthalmitis, ten cases of Candida endophthalmitis, and ten cases of sterile endophthalmitis in rabbits. In a clinical assessment of keratitis, the assay of corneal scrapings was positive in 11 of 13 Gram-negative corneal ulcers. In a similar study of clinical endophthalmitis, both Gram-negative cases had a negative limulus assay, but two cases are insufficient to be conclusive. The assay may prove to be a useful adjunct both to standard diagnostic evaluations and in the rapid direction of appropriate therapy for these conditions.
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PMID:Diagnostic limulus lysate assay for endophthalmitis and keratitis. 30 79

The limulus amebocyte lysate test has been shown to be a highly sensitive indicator of endotoxin. Our studies showed that as little as 5 ng of endotoxin could be detected in aqueous or vitreous humor in vitro, although 10 microgram endotoxin injected into the aqueous could not be detected. Subsequent studies showed that by diluting the aqueous equally with saline solution, this inhibitory effect could be overcome. Detection of endotoxin elaborated from Pseudomonas aeruginosa was made as early as 24 hours after induced Pseudomonas keratitis or endophthalmitis, whereas staphylococcal-induced keratitis or endophthalmitis gave negative results. Positive cultures using trypticase soy broth or agar slants were observed on all infected animals. Thus, this technique should have ready application for rapid detection of Pseudomonas keratitis or endophthalmitis.
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PMID:The limulus lysate test. A rapid test for diagnosis of Pseudomonas keratitis or endophthalmitis. 30 80

A 69-year-old male with chronic herpes simplex keratitis underwent penetrating keratoplasty, using cryopreserved tissue. Seven weeks postoperatively the patient developed cephalosporium endophthalmitis. Intensive medical and surgical therapy was unsuccessful and the eye had to be enucleated within three weeks. Cephalosporium species are isolated more often in intraocular infection than from corneal ulceration. Although favorable response to Amphotericin-B and Primaricin has been reported, the final outcome has been unfavorable in most of these cases.
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PMID:Cephalosporium endophthalmitis following penetrating keratoplasty. 37 Jul 8

A 45-year-old man died of Hogdkin's disease complicated by peritonitis and possible septicemia. His corneas were used for transplant in a 26-year-old man with advanced keratoconus and a 42-year-old man with vascularized central leukoma of old herpetic keratitis. Both recipients developed a fulminating endophthalmitis with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We believe that the donor corneas, although clinically normal, were heavily infected, with signs of inflammation possibly suppressed by the Hodgkin's disease.
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PMID:Transfer of bacterial infections by donor cornea in penetrating keratoplasty. 37 48

We initiated a pathologic investigation of ocular disease in wallabies. Of 21 animals examined, the eyes were investigated histologically in 11; in four of these animals the brains were also available for section and the sera were investigated in three. In ten animals only sera were received. Histologic studies showed bilateral or unilateral cataract in five animals. Eight animals, with or without cataracts, showed various degrees of keratitis, uveitis, choroidoretinitis, or endophthalmitis. In three animals Toxoplasma cysts were found within the retina or brain, or both. Of the 13 cases examined serologically 11 were positive for toxoplasmosis; three reached high titers.
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PMID:Ocular toxoplasmosis in wallabies (Macropus rufogriseus). 38

The susceptibility of newborn and infant mice to eye infection by Pseudomonas aeruginosa was studied in 5-, 10-, 15- to 16-, and 21-day-old mice. In the first of three age-related susceptibility experiments, inoculation of P. aeruginosa under the unopened eyelids of infant (5- and 10-day-old) mice in the absence of prior corneal wounding resulted in acute infection and rapid death of many of the animals. However, endophthalmitis was observed in about 30% of bacteremic animals that survived to age 14 to 15 days. In the second experiment, 15- to 16-day-old mice whose eyes were open received P. aeruginosa topically onto either wounded or unwounded corneas. At least 50% of the mice that received both corneal wounding and the bacteria exhibited keratitis, endophthalmitis, and subsequent phthisis bulbi. None of the infected mice died of bacteremia. In addition, mice infected in the absence of corneal wounding did not exhibit any eye damage. In the third experiment, the wounded-cornea responses of 21-day-old mice to P. aeruginosa were more variable. Thirty seven percent of the mice exhibited an intermediate response of decreased eye size and cataracts which was not observed in 15- to 16-day-old mice, 32% recovered spontaneously, and 29% exhibited complete shrinkage of the infected eyes. The variability of the latter responses may reflect a transitional maturation period of natural immunity to the organism in some of the animals, since all 4- to 6-week-old adult mice respond routinely to ocular wounding and similar infections with the organism by undergoing a spontaneous resolvable keratitis (3 to 4 weeks).
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PMID:Age-related susceptibility to Pseudomonas aeruginosa ocular infections in mice. 66 95

Sinus histiocytosis is a newly recognized benign disease affecting mainly children and young adults and usually having a protracted clinical course that is relatively unaffected by therapy. This paper describes four additional patients who had orbital involvement initially and reviews the salient clinical and histopathologic features of this entity. The outstanding clinical feature is cervical lymphadenopathy. Associated findings include low-grade fever, anemia, leukocytosis, and elevated IgG levels. A small percentage of patients develop proptosis with palpable orbital tumors. Such patients may not have appreciable lymphadenopathy. Progressive proptosis may lead to exposure keratitis, corneal ulceration, endophthalmitis, and loss of the eye. Histopathologically, the lymph nodes and orbital mass show a proliferation of large histiocytes intermixed with a variable proportion of lymphocytes and plasma cells. Lymphocytes and occasionally other cells derived from the hematopoietic system are commonly seen within the cytoplasm of the histiocytes.
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PMID:Orbital involvement in 'sinus' histiocytosis. A report of four cases. 92 80

Only a few isolated cases of endophthalmitis have Corynebacterium been implicated as etiology. This diphtheroid, which has been considered for a long time as a nonpathogenic contaminant from the conjunctival flora, may produce systemic diseases usually in immuno-deficient patients. Keratitis and endophthalmitis cases have been reported in the literature. We report three cases of chronic endophthalmitis after extracapsular extraction with intraocular chamber posterior lens which are characterized by many subacute iridocyclitis and vitritis attacks treated by topical steroids. These endophthalmitis are characterized by decrease of visual acuity, hypopion, white plaque on posterior capsule and vitritis. In the first case, Corynebacterium has been isolated from the culture of vitreous and in the second and third cases from the culture of aqueous humor. These bacteria are often very slow growing, 8 to 14 days in the 3 cases. Colonies may not become visible on culture plates before one week or more. Corynebacterium grow well on ordinary media (blood and chocolate agar). The major difficulty is not to discard organism frequently considered contaminants. The treatment associated systemic antibiotherapy with steroids or not, central capsulotomy and vitrectomy with intraocular injection of antibiotic with or without steroids. Antibiotics sensitivities among diphteroids vary greatly. Quinolones, penicillins, vancomycin, cyclines and aminosides are often a good choice. However, individual sensitivities determined by the antibiogram must be used for an appropriate treatment.
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PMID:[Chronic Corynebacterium endophthalmitis. Apropos of 3 cases]. 129 92

This paper presents a series of six patients with ocular injuries resulting from magpie attacks. Five cases involved children. In two cases the penetration was overlooked initially. In one case the keratitis was caused by Bacillus cereus. Full ophthalmic examination, including indirect ophthalmoscopy and microbiological studies, must be undertaken initially to identify unrecognised eye injuries and to prevent the possible sight-threatening complications of vitreal fibrosis with subsequent retinal detachment or endophthalmitis.
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PMID:Ocular injuries caused by magpies. 145 1

Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis are organisms that frequently cause conjunctivitis, keratitis and endophthalmitis. MRSA comprised about 25% of the S. aureus isolated from ocular infections; most were from compromised host. MRSA was resistant to penicillins, cephems and macrolides but was sensitive to amikacin, netilmicin, minocycline and ofloxacin. Ofloxacin-resistant strains, however increased rapidly. Topical vancomycin, arbekacin and minocycline were used when commercially available antibiotics were inadequate.
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PMID:[MRSA ocular infections]. 150 38


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