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Query: UMLS:C0022568 (
keratitis
)
5,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The introduction of the hydrophilic contact lens has been a significant advance in ophthalmology for the correction of ametropia, as well as for the therapy of corneal disease. The number of potential contact lens candidates has been greatly expanded by the introduction of both spin-cast and lathe-cut lenses composed of a variety of individual hydrophilic polymers. Myopia,
hyperopia
, presbyopia, aphakia and moderate astigmatism can be corrected with a reasonable degree of success with the present lenses. Even in keratoconus hydrophilic lenses offer a nonsurgical alternative, especially when combined with spectacle overcorrection. The introduction of hydrophilic bandages in the treatment of corneal disease has been an important addition to the therapeutic armamentarium of the ophthalmologist. When properly applied, these lenses can provide subjective relief of pain while serving to protect the damaged cornea from the traumatic action of the lids and desiccating effects of the atmosphere. The hydrophilic material is permeable to many topically instilled medications and tends to prolong the contact time of the drugs with the corneal surface. Proper fitting of the bandage lenses can eliminate superficial corneal irregularities and, thus, improve the visual acuity while treatment progresses. Medical indications for the use of this therapy include bullous keratopathy, dry eye syndromes, chemical burns, exposure
keratitis
, and neurotropic
keratitis
. A number of recurrent erosions and ulcerations have also responded to this form of therapy. Surgical indications include lacerations, postoperative lamellar and penetrating keratoplasty, and keratectomies. One of the most promising applications concerns their use in the postoperative management of alkaline burns. Best results have been obtained by constant wear of the bandage lens, with topical administration of steroids, antibiotics, and saline solution (hypotonic or hypertonic) as indicated. The possible deleterious effects of standard ocular medication containing preservatives has been overstated. Patients receiving medications without preservatives must be placed on prophylactic antibiotics to avoid secondary infection. In many cases, the therapeutic efficacy is closely related to the diameter and curvature of the bandage lens as well as the inherent physical properties of the polymers. With meticulous fitting and close observation complications have been minimal. In many instances the results have been dramatic, but even if unsuccessful the method provides a safe and relatively simple nonsurgical alternative in the treatment of severe corneal disease. Just as with older modalities, the ultimate success or failure depends upon the intrinsic nature of the disease process as well as reasonable therapeutic application based on a knowledge of the mechanics involved.
...
PMID:New aspects of contact lenses in ophthalmology. 95 43
A 42-year-old Bahraini man had uneventful laser in situ keratomileusis for
hyperopia
(OD: +3.00 +0.75 x 155 degrees; OS: +2.00 +0.50 x 155 degrees). Three weeks later, he presented with localized
keratitis
in his right eye, with localized
keratitis
at the flap margin with stromal edema. Uncorrected visual acuity was 20/80 OD with no improvement with pinhole, and was 20/20 OS. Corneal smear culture showed a positive growth of Staphylococcus aureus. The patient was immediately treated with subconjunctival gentamicin and intensive topical ofloxacin 0.3% with systemic cephalosporin. The patient recovered from
keratitis
within 2 weeks and his uncorrected visual acuity OD improved to 20/20.
Keratitis
following LASIK should be treated promptly so that it does not lead to permanent reduction in visual acuity.
...
PMID:Bacterial keratitis following laser in situ keratomileusis for hyperopia. 1020 24
Surgical alteration of the focusing or refractive properties of the eye has been performed on millions of patients. An array of procedures to correct myopia,
hyperopia
, astigmatism, and presbyopia have been introduced over the past 25 years with varying degrees of success. Improved technology has increased patient and physician satisfaction and enthusiasm. Currently available surgical procedures can be categorized as incisional, surface-altering, lamellar, and intraocular. The choice of procedure depends on individual patient indications and contraindications based on results of ocular examinations, eg, corneal pachymetry to measure corneal thickness, keratometry to measure the corneal curvature, basal tear secretory rate, and dark-adapted pupil size. The postoperative uncorrected visual acuity depends, in large part, on the quality of the preoperative evaluation and refraction. Before scheduling a patient for surgery, the ophthalmologist must ensure that the patient understands the potential risks of the procedure and has realistic expectations for the postoperative level and quality of uncorrected visual acuity. Postoperative complications include corneal flap displacement, undercorrection and overcorrection, and epithelial ingrowth under the corneal flap and inflammatory
keratitis
. Postoperative dry eye, infection, and inflammation are usually treated medically. Ongoing technological innovations to customize the surgical approach to an individual patient's eye continue to improve outcomes.
...
PMID:Making sense of refractive surgery in 2001: why, when, for whom, and by whom? 1149 22
A total of 6682 intrastromal photokeratoablations (LASIK) for myopia of 1.5-16 diopters and
hypermetropia
of 1.5-8 diopters are analyzed. Lamellar incision of the cornea was formed with a Hansatome microkeratotome and photokeratoablation was carried out using a Nidek EC-5000 laser. Primary and secondary deformations of a corneal flap and primary and secondary adaptation are defined. During LASIK for correction of myopia, the areas of corneal flap and corneal bed can fail to correspond to each other. This non-correspondence is the greater, the deeper is keratoablation. The corneal flap undergoes several stages of changes during the early and remote postoperative periods: primary deformation during lamellar incision, primary dysadaptation presenting as various forms of corneal dystrophy, and secondary deformation developing under new adaptation conditions. The velocity of the corneal flap adaptation depends on its reposition during the final stage of the operation, which can essentially decrease the risk of complications. The incidence of central dystrophy (pseudodiffuse lamellar
keratitis
) in various methods of the flap reposition varies from 0 to 1.5%.
...
PMID:[Relationship between corneal flap adaptation and its reformation after intrastromal photokeratectomy]. 1156 70
Implantation of an Intraocular Posterior-chamber Lens for a Phacik Eye from STAAR Surgical Co. in Medium and Higher Grades of Myopia and
Hyperopia
Implantation of an intraocular Collamer lens for a phacic eye produced by STAAR Surgical (ICL) co. is a modern method of correction of medium and high-grade refractive defects--myopia and
hyperopia
. The authors evaluate the results of implantation of ICL Staar Surgical in 20 eyes of 13 patients (1 man and 12 women). Their mean age was 31.36 +/- 9.21 years and the follow-up period 1-54 months (mean 28.8 months +/- 12.42). The group was divided into two sub-groups--
hyperopia
(8 eyes) and myopia (12 eyes). The mean value of refraction before surgery was 28 D +/- 2.03 and +0.25 Dcyl manifest (in cycloplegia +7.6 +/- 2.28 D) (from 3.75 D to 10.0 D) in the group of
hyperopia
and -14.25 D +/- 5.68 and -1.81 Dcyl (from -5.5 D to -25.0 D) in the myopic group. The required postoperative refraction was in 17 eyes emmetropia and in 3 eyes residual myopia up to -3.0 D with regard to incipient presbyopia. The authors evaluate the resultant best corrected visual acuity (BCVA), the resultant postoperative refraction, the incidence of postoperative complications and changed density of endothelial cells in the centre of the cornea in the course of time. In the group of
hyperopia
improvement of the BCVA as compared with the preoperative value occurred by one line in two eyes (25%), in 5 eyes (62.5%) BCVA remained unchanged. In one instance deterioration by one line occurred due to a diminution of endothelial cells in the centre of the cornea after surgery. In the group of myopia in 7 eyes (58.3%) improvement by 1 line occurred, in 2 eyes (16.7%) by 2 lines and in 3 cases (25%) BCVA remained unchanged. The mean value of postoperative refraction in the myopic group in required emmetropia (9 eyes) was -0.77 +/- 1.62 D and in required residual myopia (3 eyes) -1.5 +/- 1.32 D. The mean value of postoperative refraction in the group of
hyperopia
was +0.57 +/- 0.5 D for far sight and +1.28 +/- 0.58 D for near sight. The most frequent early postoperative complications included
keratitis
striata in 5, epithelopathy in 3 and residues of viscoelastic material behind the ICL in 3 eyes. As to late postoperative complications, in 2 eyes a change in endothelial cell density was involved, in 12 eyes the syndrome of pigment dispersal and in one eye late decentration of ICL occurred with subsequent anterior subcapsular cataract. The change in density of endothelial cells was most markedly expressed 3 months after surgery in the hyperopic group. The advantage of ICL implantation is rapid postoperative visual rehabilitation, reversibility of the operation, preserved accommodation and satisfactory stability of the postoperative refraction.
...
PMID:[Implantation of the Starr Surgical intraocular posterior chamber lenses for phakic eyes in medium and higher levels of myopia and hyperopia]. 1268 Jan 16
Laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) is an effective option and currently one of the most commonly applied surgical techniques in the correction of refractive errors such as myopia,
hyperopia
, and astigmatism. In contrast to photorefractive keratectomy, it maintains the integrity of Bowman's membrane and the epithelium leading to faster visual rehabilitation as well as less pain and discomfort. Nevertheless, following LASIK the stroma is exposed to infectious organisms. Sight-threatening complications after LASIK are reported to be as rare as 1 in 1000 procedures. However, any infectious
keratitis
remains potentially devastating. Reports about infectious
keratitis
following LASIK have increasingly surfaced in recent years. We present a review of the literature on microbial
keratitis
and present our own cases and recommendations for possible prophylaxis and therapy.
...
PMID:[Microbial keratitis following laser in situ keratomileusis. Prevention, differential diagnosis, and therapy]. 1550 51
The problems of mild and high
hyperopia
surgical correction are complicated and an individual approach is needed. The aim of the study was to evaluate long-term efficiency and safety of two types of refractive procedures in mild and high
hyperopia
correction: LASIK and ICL (phakic intraocular posterior chamber contact lens) implantation. The authors evaluated a group of 37 eyes of 20 patients; the average age was 36.3 years +/- 11.8 (SD) and the follow-up period was 28.1 months +/- 10.2 (SD) after LASIK procedure, and a group of 21 eyes of 13 patients; the average age was 28.6 years +/- 6.1 (SD) and the follow-up period 30.4 months +/- 20.9 (SD) after the ICL implantation. They compared occurrence of preoperative, intraoperative and postoperative complications in both methods. They specified the efficiency and safety of the procedure by means of so called efficiency and safety index. With a questionnaire they evaluated the patient's subjective satisfaction with the refractive procedure. In the group of hyperopic LASIK, they proved statistically significant appearance of the refractive error regression, number of performed re-operations, appearance of the peroperative decentration of the photoablation zone and induced astigmatism (p < 0.05). In the ICL group, the repeated preoperative sessions for Nd-YAG laser iridotomies were necessary. Postoperatively, the appearance of
keratitis
striata, syndrome of the late pigment dispersion, and glare were statistically significant (p < 0.05). The authors also demonstrated higher efficiency and safety of the ICL implantation method comparing to LASIK during the whole follow up period (p < 0.05), and also higher subjective satisfaction after ICL implantation. Comparing the intraocular procedure (ICL) to the laser method (LASIK), in mild and high
hyperopia
correction, the higher efficiency and safety was achieved by ICL implantation.
...
PMID:[Comparison of the efficiency and safety of the two methods, LASIK and ICL in mild and high hyperopia correction--part two]. 1762 30
A 48-year-old man who had conductive keratoplasty (CK) for consecutive
hyperopia
following myopic laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) developed progressive diffuse lamellar
keratitis
. To our knowledge, this is the first report of CK after LASIK that required surgical intervention for interface inflammation.
...
PMID:Stage III diffuse lamellar keratitis following conductive keratoplasty over a LASIK flap. 1946 4
A 15-year-old myopic female contact lens wearer developed severe central corneal
keratitis
in the left eye caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. A rapid diagnosis and treatment led to a satisfactory response, although a gray central corneal scar,
hyperopia
, and visual loss remained. No surgery was required after the infection resolved, and the patient was assessed annually. Sixty-four months later, the cornea was almost totally transparent and she had a visual acuity of 20/20. The results of the topographical examination were similar to those after a refractive ablative procedure. Satisfactory refractive outcome after severe Pseudomonas aeruginosa
keratitis
may occur in extraordinary cases.
...
PMID:Refractive outcome after severe Pseudomonas aeruginosa Keratitis. 2118
To report clinical manifestations of a female patient with bilateral bacterial
keratitis
following photorefractive keratectomy (PRK). Bilateral PRK was performed for moderate
hyperopia
. Bandage contact lenses were fitted at the conclusion of the surgery. Bilateral infectious
keratitis
with hypopion was diagnosed within 4 days after surgery. Smear and culture were obtained and showed the presence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). The patient was treated with systemic prednisone and topical antibiotics (vancomycin, tobramycin and netylmicin) and betamethasone. After 1 month corneal leukoma was still present and remained unchanged during the following 7 months. Infectious
keratitis
is a rare complication of PRK that appears early in the postoperative period. MRSA
keratitis
may determine long-term visual impairment despite prompt therapeutic intervention.
...
PMID:Bilateral methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus keratitis following hyperopic photorefractive surgery. 2221 18
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