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Query: UMLS:C0022568 (
keratitis
)
5,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inflammatory eye diseases in Aids patients are common. For CMV-retinitis an incidence of up to 45% is reported in the literature. Other retinal diseases such as acute retinal necrosis are less common but are difficult to treat and often follow a disastrous course. Ocular lues may present very different clinical pictures and is the great "imitator" in AIDS patients as well. In toxoplasmosis the typical chorioretinal scars next to the acute inflammatory infiltrates are commonly absent.
Infections
with candida occur in i.v. drug-addicts in particular. Bacterial corneal ulcers and herpetic
keratitis
are not more common in HIV-positive patients than in immunocompetent individuals, but the course of the disease is often more severe and prolonged. In patients with low CD4 counts Microsporus can cause painfull
keratitis
. Mollusca contagiosa are more common in AIDS patients and show the typical lesions, though these are greater in number (commonly more than 20) or in unusual localizations (mucous membrane).
...
PMID:[Eye infections in AIDS patients]. 944 3
Infection
of the mouse cornea with herpes simplex virus (HSV) results in an immunopathologic disease of the eye termed herpetic stromal
keratitis
(HSK), in which the principal orchestrator is the CD4+ T cell. The mouse genotype largely determines susceptibility or resistance to HSK. BALB/c mice (H2dIgh-1a) are susceptible, while its congenic C.B-17 strain (H2dIgh-1b), which differs only in the Ig heavy chain locus, is resistant to HSK. As the magnitude and duration of viral replication as well as anti-HSV immune responses were similar in both strains, it was determined whether resistance was due to failure of CD4+ T cells to organize the immunopathologic reaction. Adoptive transfer of HSV-primed or naive CD4+ T cells from resistant C.B-17 strain into HSV-infected SCID mice resulted in HSK lesions indistinguishable from those caused by similar transfers of BALB/c CD4+ T cells. Similar results were obtained with transfers of whole T cell populations as well as with unfractionated splenocytes from the resistant mice. These results show that while intact C.B-17 mice exhibit resistance to HSK, they possess potentially pathogenic CD4+ T cells in their repertoire. The data suggest that the HSV-infected SCID mouse provides a proinflammatory microenvironment that overrides regulatory controls and/or cause activation of quiescent cells into aggressive effector T cells that orchestrate HSK.
...
PMID:Immunopathology of herpetic stromal keratitis: discordance in CD4+ T cell function between euthymic host and reconstituted SCID recipients. 955 4
Pigmented fungi were identified in ocular tissues from 2 cats and 1 dog. The first cat was euthanatized because of acute anterior uveitis that was unresponsive to treatment. On histologic examination, intraocular structures had been obliterated and replaced by a gray coagulum of inflammatory infiltrates and fungal elements. The second cat was treated for unilateral glaucoma that was unresponsive to treatment. A large retrobulbar mass, discovered and removed during an enucleation procedure, contained plant-origin foreign material.
Keratitis
, episcleritis, and orbital cellulitis with fungal elements were found on examination of the enucleated globe. The dog, examined because of a presumed corneal scratch of 2 weeks' duration that was unresponsive to treatment, had a corneal lesion subsequently removed by lamellar keratectomy that contained fungi on histologic examination.
Infections
caused by dematiaceous fungi are not common in domestic animals, and, to our knowledge, such infections in the eye have not been described.
...
PMID:Ocular infections with dematiaceous fungi in two cats and a dog. 971 33
Travelers to West, central and eastern Africa as well as to selected areas of Latin America are at risk for infection with Onchocerca volvulus.
Infection
with this tissue nematode may cause chorioretinitis and
keratitis
, and it is responsible in endemic areas for blindness in millions.1 In addition to ocular manifestations, it can produce a distressing pruriginous dermatitis or subcutaneous nodules. Clinical manifestations vary according to the parasitic load, previous immunity, and duration of infection.1
Infection
is initiated by inoculation with larvae during the bite of the Simulium black fly. Once in the connective tissue, larvae mature to filiform adults and may remain in tissues for years, with the clinical manifestations being produced by the inflammatory reaction to dying parasites. Female adults produce large amounts of microfilaria that migrate through skin and connective tissue; once an infected host is bitten, the infectious larvae develop again in the female Simulium black fly and the life cycle is completed. Transmission is from person to person, and may occur even after a relatively short exposure.2 Although infection of travelers with O. volvulus is rare, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 46 new cases of onchocerciasis were diagnosed in the United States in 1994 (Dr. David Addis, personal communication, June 1996). We describe the case of an expatriate who became infected with O. volvulus and we review the treatment and recommendations for prevention of this parasitic infection.
...
PMID:Onchocerciasis in an expatriate living in Cameroon. 981 71
Based on the experience gained at Department of
Infections
and Allergic Diseases of the Eyes and recent publications, the author proposes protocols of drug therapy of the major infectious ulcerative diseases of the cornea: herpetic ulcer, ulcer caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, gonococci, staphylococci, fungi, and acanthamedian
keratitis
. The authors emphasizes that the treatment of ulcers of the cornea should be complex, including specific therapy (corresponding to the identified agent or the agent most probable as judged from the clinical picture) and pathogenetic therapy (metabolic, antiallergic, antiinflammatory, immunomodulating, hypotensive). If corneal ulcer is rapidly recognized and forced therapy started, good results can be attained even in such a fulminant infection as those caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa or gonococci. On the other hand, therapy of keratomycosis and acanthamebian
keratitis
remains a problem.
...
PMID:[Therapeutic algorithms in infectious ulcers of cornea]. 1091 50
Infection
with the parasitic nematode Onchocerca volvulus can lead to severe visual impairment and blindness. In an effort to characterize the molecular basis for the inflammatory response in the cornea, we have developed a murine model for O. volvulus-mediated
keratitis
in which parasite antigens are injected into the corneal stroma of sensitized mice. This model reproduces the two main clinical features of human disease, corneal opacification and neovascularization. Histological analysis of corneas from these mice reveals a biphasic recruitment of neutrophils and eosinophils to the central cornea, along with a small, but persistent number of CD3+ cells. In this review, we present evidence that production of antigen-specific T cell and antibody responses are essential for development of O. volvulus
keratitis
, and we propose a sequence of molecular and cellular events that lead to migration of inflammatory cells to the cornea and to loss of corneal clarity.
...
PMID:Immune mechanisms in Onchocerca volvulus-mediated corneal disease (river blindness). 1112 54
A 35-year-old man was diagnosed with Mycobacterium abscessus
keratitis
in the left eye 3 weeks after bilateral laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK).
Infection
in the right eye developed 6 weeks after surgery. Despite aggressive treatment with topical amikacin and clarithromycin and oral clarithromycin, the infection progressed in both eyes. To improve antibiotic penetration, the LASIK flap was removed in both eyes. Culture positivity was prolonged; however, after 8 weeks of intensive topical antibiotics, the infection was eradicated. The final best corrected visual acuity was 20/30 in both eyes.
...
PMID:Bilateral Mycobacterium abscessus keratitis after laser in situ keratomileusis. 1197 73
Infection
caused by Penicillium spp. due to species other than P. marneffei is rare. We present three such cases of invasive disease. The first had chronic granulomatous disorder (CGD) with pulmonary infection caused by Penicillium spp. and he responded to amphotericin B therapy. Cases two and three were not known to be immunocompromised and both failed to respond to therapy. Case two had cerebral disease from an unknown source caused by P. chrysogenum. Case three probably acquired infection caused by P. decumbens peri-operatively and presented with paravertebral infection. The pertinent literature on invasive infections of Penicillium spp. other than P. marneffei is reviewed. From 1951 onwards, 31 reported cases of invasive disease included 12 cases of pulmonary infection (six in non-immunocompromised patients), four cases of prosthetic valve endocarditis, six cases of CAPD peritonitis, five cases of endophthalmitis, individual cases of fungemia and oesophagitis (both in AIDS), upper urinary tract infection and intracranial infection. Trauma, surgery or prosthetic material is commonly implicated in the non-pulmonary cases. Superficial infection (
keratitis
and otomycosis) is commonly caused by Penicillium spp. Allergic pulmonary disease, often occupational (such as various cheeseworkers' diseases), is also common. Optimal therapy for invasive infection is not established, but surgery may be advisable if possible. Amphotericin B may be the most effective antifungal drug.
...
PMID:Invasive infection due to penicillium species other than P. marneffei. 1238 76
Sparfloxacin 03% eye drop was evaluated in consecutive culture proven cases of conjunctivitis and corneal infection. Sparfloxacin 03% eye drop was found to provide 100% cure rate clInIcally as well as bacteriologically. This can be due to better ocular penetration and higher therapeutic index of sparfloxacin 03% eye drops. Sparfloxacin seems to be a better antibiotic for topical application for themanagement of external ocular
Infections
like conjunctivitis,
keratitis
and corneal ulcers.
...
PMID:Evaluation of sparfloxacin eye drop in the management of conjunctival and corneal infection. 1241 74
Infection
with the parasitic nematode Onchocerca volvulus is associated with inflammation of the skin and cornea that can lead to blindness. Corneal damage is thought to occur as a result of the host inflammatory responses to degenerating microfilariae in the eye. We have utilized a murine model of corneal inflammation (
keratitis
) to investigate the immune and inflammatory responses associated with river blindness. Soluble extracts of O. volvulus, a filarial species that contains the endosymbiont bacteria Wolbachia or Acanthocheilonema viteae (a nematode not naturally infected with the bacteria) were injected into mouse corneas. Inflammatory responses and corneal changes were measured. We demonstrated a major role for endosymbiont Wolbachia bacteria and Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) in the pathogenesis of ocular onchocerciasis.
...
PMID:Immunopathogenesis of Onchocerca volvulus keratitis (river blindness): a novel role for TLR4 and endosymbiotic Wolbachia bacteria. 1473 27
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