Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022568 (keratitis)
5,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Patients with HIV infection and, above all, patients with full-blown AIDS can get a variety of ocular diseases as well as some cerebral maladies which have an influence on ocular functions. First there are hematogenous opportunistic infections of the retina or the choroid. The cytomegalovirus [CMV] retinitis was found in nearly 20% of all AIDS patients. Without treatment this disease destroys the retina completely, and the involved eye becomes blind. This can be prevented by modern therapeutic strategies in most of the cases. Other infections affecting the retina are toxoplasmosis, systemic varizella zoster or herpes simplex virus infections, syphilis or, seldom, fungal or bacterial pathogens. The choroid mainly can be infested by mycobacteria, cryptococci and pneumocystis carinii. Early detection and treatment of all inflammations are necessary. The anterior eye can be affected by a sicca syndrome and various superficial infections but also noninfectious inflammation. The anterior uvea can be involved in various opportunistic infections of the posterior eye segment. An HIV-associated isolated anterior uveitis has been described in earlier stages of the HIV infection. Treatment of mycobacterial infections with rifabutin can cause an anterior uveitis as well. 1 to 2% of HIV-infected persons suffer from a zoster ophthalmicus with more severe keratitis than it occurs in immunocompetent persons. Last but not least, there are various cerebral affections which can cause visual disturbances. So the optic nerve can be involved in various forms of retinitic or meningoencephalitic processes, of ischemic mechanisms or elevated intracranial pressure. Neuroophthalmological symptoms also include homonymous hemianopsia caused by foci of cerebral toxoplasmosis, progressive multifocal leucencephalopathy or primary intracerebral malignant lymphoma situated in the central neuron of the afferent visual pathway. A variety of oculomotor abnormalities can be caused by a great variety of cerebral disease. Moreover, there are signs of neuroretinal dysfunction in computed perimetry and in color vision or contrast sensitivity testing. Some sight threatening diseases initially can be symptomless for the patient, though they should be treated immediately in order to keep the remaining visual damage small. Thus, regular ophthalmological investigations are necessary in patients with an advanced stage of the immunodeficiency, regardless whether they have ocular complaints or not. Moreover, the patients have to be advised to attend an ophthalmologist immediately, when they notice any kind of visual disturbances or ocular symptoms.
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PMID:[Why are AIDS patients frequently visually impaired?]. 865 Jun 23

Herein we describe a relapsing acute keratouveitis without known aetiology. The disorder has been found in two families and shows an autosomal dominant inheritance. Acute anterior uveitis can be traced for five generations in one of these families. In the same family there is also an association to an autosomal dominantly inherited vascular disorder (Osler-Rendu-Weber disease). The anterior uveitis has an acute onset, a recurrent pattern and a mild activity. The associated keratitis is seen as a midstromal thin flat disc in the central cornea, sometimes with folds in Descemet's membrane as a sign of oedema. This causes a change in refraction and a mild reduction of the corrected visual acuity. There is a prompt response to topical steroid treatment, but the corneal changes have in one case become permanent. Clinical documentation and the mode of inheritance is presented.
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PMID:Keratouveitis--two families with a dominantly inherited disorder. 895 Mar 97

Clinical signs of impaired vision or neurological disease occurred in seven of 74 free-living moose (Alces alces) from Saskatchewan, Canada, submitted for necropsy between 1969 and 1994. Several lesions were found in each eye, including retinal degeneration (seven cases), cataract (six cases), lymphocytic-plasmacytic anterior uveitis (six cases), corneal scars (six cases), keratitis (four cases), and microphthalmia (one case), but their cause was not determined. Moraxella bovis was isolated from the cornea of one moose. Lesions in the brain and spinal cord were mild or absent.
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PMID:Pathology of ocular lesions in free-living moose (Alces alces) from Saskatchewan. 902 95

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.
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PMID:Ocular infections with dematiaceous fungi in two cats and a dog. 971 33

Traumatic keratouveitis in horses is characterised by a unilateral, aseptic, vascularising keratitis accompanied by moderate to severe anterior uveitis. In a series of 9 cases of post traumatic keratouveitis, topical and systemic nonsteroidal drugs and atropine were used to control the anterior uveitis while allowing spontaneous corneal healing. Among the 9 cases reported, 6 affected eyes previously treated with local corticosteroids took significantly longer to resolve when compared to 3 eyes in which corticosteroids had not been administered. It was concluded that, in cases of equine post traumatic keratouveitis, locally administered corticosteroids inhibit healing of damaged corneal stroma and, by prolonging the keratitis, perpetuate the concurrent anterior uveitis.
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PMID:Post traumatic keratouveitis in horses. 975 92

Varicella zoster virus (VZV) infection is a frequent complication following bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Involvement of the ophthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve, herpes zoster ophthalmicus (HZO), can result in significant and potentially vision-threatening ocular complications. We report the frequency and characteristics of HZO following BMT, including the timing of infection, treatment, ocular complications, and visual outcome. Between 1983 and 1997, 572 patients underwent BMT and seven children developed HZO at a median of 150 days following transplantation. All but one of the children had undergone allogeneic BMT. All of the children were treated with acyclovir after onset of the rash but none had received prophylactic therapy. All seven children developed ocular complications within the first 4 weeks following the onset of the dermatomal rash but none reported any symptoms during this period. Complications included keratitis in six, anterior uveitis in three and scleritis in one. Keratitis was an early complication developing within the first 4 weeks, while anterior uveitis and scleritis occurred later in the course of the disease. The high frequency of ocular complications and lack of symptoms in children with HZO following BMT suggests that early ophthalmologic evaluation is warranted in this group of patients. Prompt diagnosis and treatment of ocular complications is essential in the prevention of acute and long-term ocular sequelae in these children.
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PMID:Herpes zoster ophthalmicus following bone marrow transplantation in children. 1041 22

Herpetic eye disease is common and is frequently associated with intraocular inflammation or uveitis. Despite recent advances in measuring anti-herpes virus antibodies and viral DNA in ocular fluids, diagnosis remains largely clinical. The two more common syndromes include anterior uveitis, often associated with keratitis, and the acute retinal necrosis (ARN) syndrome. Treatment is complex and requires careful monitoring to provide the appropriate balance of antiviral medication and corticosteroids. Long-term prophylaxis with oral antiviral agents may be required in selected patients to help prevent the vision-compromising complications associated with recurrences.
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PMID:Advances in diagnosis and management of herpetic uveitis. 1079 Dec 59

Diabetes is associated with many emergent ophthalmologic conditions. The management of patients with diabetes requires careful monitoring for visual symptoms and frequent physical examination for signs of retinopathy. Randomized studies have documented a significant reduction in the development of new retinopathy and the progression of existing retinopathy with tight control of diabetes. Photocoagulation laser therapy is helpful in preserving vision in severe nonproliferative retinopathy, for proliferative retinopathy, and for clinically significant macular edema. Vascular events include arterial and venous occlusions and cranial nerve palsies; important diagnostic clues are visual symptoms and the findings of ocular and neurologic examinations. Life-threatening infections associated with diabetes include endophthalmitis and mucormycosis, which require prompt diagnosis to prevent blindness or systemic infection. Herpes zoster infection, which is common in older patients and in patients with immunosuppression, may affect the trigeminal nerve and cause anterior uveitis and keratitis. Patients with zoster and skin vesicles on the face need emergent ophthalmologic evaluation and treatment because untreated ocular infection and inflammation may lead to scarring and synechiae formation in the anterior chamber, resulting in vision loss.
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PMID:Ophthalmologic emergencies in the patient with diabetes. 1114 64

The aim of the study is to research the immunoglobulins' concentration into the tears liquid and into the blood serum at the patients with acute affections of the anterior ocular pole. The study was accomplished on two groups of patients: one group with herpetic Keratitis, the other with anterior uveitis, the second having a different etiology--that the viral one. Another group of patients with senile cataract was used like witness-group. The immunoglobulins concentration were detected into the serum and into the tears by the Mancini method of the radial immunodiffusion. The results indicate a general immunodefficiency signed by the decrease of IgG and IgM into the serum on the one hand, and the increase of local defense mechanisms reflected on the growing of IgA and IgG level into the tears, on the other hand.
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PMID:[Tears' immunology in acute eye diseases]. 1151 40

Feline herpesvirus-1 (FHV-1) infection is ubiquitous in the domestic cat population worldwide. The most common clinical ocular manifestations of infection with FHV-1 are conjunctivitis and keratitis. This paper reviews the pathogenesis of feline herpesvirus-1 and discusses the various clinical ocular manifestations, diagnostic techniques and treatment of FHV-1-induced diseases. Ocular manifestations include: conjunctivitis, keratitis, stromal keratitis, keratoconjunctivitis sicca, ophthalmia neonatorium, symblepharon, corneal sequestrum, eosinophilic keratitis and anterior uveitis. Diagnostic techniques discussed include: virus isolation, fluorescent antibody testing, serum neutralising titers, ELISA and polymerase chain reaction. Various therapies are also discussed.
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PMID:Ocular manifestations of feline herpesvirus. 1171 25


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