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Query: UMLS:C0022568 (
keratitis
)
5,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of keratoconjunctivitis caused by adenovirus type 21 in London has been described. A 59-year-old woman attented hospital in August 1974 complaining of a 3-week history of redness, grittiness, watery discharge, and
photophobia
in her left eye and a slight upper respiratory infection. Clinical examination showed a moderate follicular conjuctivitis mainly in the lower and upper fornices, which lasted for 6 weeks. In the cornea a moderate amount of epithelial and subepithelial punctate
keratitis
was observed. The subepithelial opacities were coarse, discrete, and round and lasted for 4 months. The course of follicular conjunctivitis and the subepithelial punctate
keratitis
in this patient was similar to epidemic keratoconjunctivitis caused by adenovirus 8. A conjunctival swabbing collected from this patient was positive for adenovirus serotype 21.
...
PMID:Adenovirus type 21 keratoconjunctivitis. 21 86
The topical action of a combined therapy of human interferon (3000 U/ml) and secretory immunoglobulin IgA (1,5 mg/ml) was studied in 56 patients with herpetic
keratitis
. The pain and
photophobia
disappeared within 48 h after the beginning of treatment and a marked reduction of the corneal lesion during the first week of treatment was observed in all the patients. The therapy was effective, with complete healing of the lesion in 94.8% of cases; 72.2% of them healed in less than 15 days. The highest frequency of healing was between 5 and 10 days, and the rest up to 30 days. Humoral, immunological and delayed hypersensitivity studies were carried out in 36 patients.
...
PMID:Combined therapy of human interferon (HI) and secretory immunoglobulin (S-IgA) in the treatment of human herpetic keratitis. 35 19
A previously unrecognized autosomal dominant syndrome affecting oral, nasal, vaginal, urethral, anal, bladder, and conjunctival mucosa with cataracts, follicular keratosis, nonscarring alopecia, and terminal lung disease is described in a four-generation kindred of German extraction. Severe
photophobia
, tearing, and nystagmus in infancy heralds the development of
keratitis
, corneal vascularization, and lens cataracts. Repeated corneal transplants have failed. Red, periorificial mucosal lesions involving the above structures are noted by 1 year of age and may persist throughout life. Chronic rhinorrhea and repeated upper respiratory infections frequently progress to bilateral pneumonia accompanied by loss of hair, diarrhea, occasional melena, enuresis, pyuria, and hematuria. Spontaneous pneumothorax is frequent, terminating in fibrocystic-type lung disease and cor pulmonale. Women have had repeated abnormal vaginal PAP smears. Histologically the mucosal epithelium shows dyshesion, thinning of the epithelial layer, and dyskeratosis. Mucosal PAP smears show lack of epithelial maturation, cytoplasmic vacuoles and inclusions, and individual cell dyskeratosis. Histochemically there is a lack of cornification and keratinization. Ultrastructural studies show lack of keratohyalin granules, a paucity of desmosomes, intercellular accumulations, cytoplasmic vacuolization, and formation of bands and aggregates of filamentous fibers and structures in the cytoplasm resembling desmosomes and gap junctions. The condition is probably a panepithelial cell defect of desmosomal and gap junction structure most prominently affecting mucosal epithelia associated with an increased susceptibility to a variety of adventitious organisms.
...
PMID:Hereditary mucoepithelial dysplasia: a disease apparently of desmosome and gap junction formation. 48 50
Large scale, multiclinic evaluations of vidarabine (Ara-A, Vira A, adenine arabinoside) for treating herpetic
keratitis
have been conducted as double-blind studies (169 patients) in comparison with IDU and open studies (146 patients). In the open studies, the disease in the majority of patients had been refractory to IDU. The effects of vidarabine and IDU were approximately the same in improvement of symptoms (lacrimination,
photophobia
, sensitivity) and percent of and time for corneal reepithelialization. With vidarabine, significantly more patients had improved distant visual acuity than did with IDU. In the open studies, vidarabine also was effective. Of 116 patients whose ulcers had not responded to IDU, 91 (78%) had reepithelialization within four weeks of treatment with vidarabine. On the basis of results from these studies, vidarabine appears to be a safe and effective drug for treating herpes simplex
keratitis
.
...
PMID:Vidarabine therapy of simple and IDU-complicated herpetic keratitis. 79 69
In a placebo-controlled, double-masked clinical trial, the authors evaluated the effects of topical 2% cyclosporine on 20 patients with vernal keratoconjunctivitis (VKC). Nineteen patients were male and one was female. Patients ranged in age from 5 to 19 years (mean, 9.7 years). Symptoms of itching, tearing,
photophobia
, discharge, and foreign body sensation were evaluated and recorded at weekly intervals for a period of 6 weeks. There was a statistically significant decrease in the conjunctival hyperemia, papillary hypertrophy, punctate
keratitis
, and Trantas' dots in the group of patients treated with cyclosporine but not in the group treated with placebo. No adverse effects and no detectable levels of cyclosporine were noted in the blood in the cyclosporine-treated group. Cyclosporine appears to be safe and effective for the short-term treatment of VKC.
...
PMID:Topical cyclosporine in vernal keratoconjunctivitis. 180 Sep 29
The authors report a series of five markedly atopic patients in whom a severe sclerokeratitis developed within 1 to 4 weeks of keratoplasty. The onset was acute with discomfort,
photophobia
, hyperemia, and mucus production. This resulted in early loosening of sutures and was associated with microbial
keratitis
in two cases and graft rejection in one. The inflammatory reaction was controlled with high-dose oral steroids and did not recur when the treatment was terminated. Serum IgE levels were elevated in all these patients (range, 421-8434 kU/l). Binding of this IgE onto the surface of mast cells in the conjunctiva with subsequent degranulation may be involved in the pathogenesis of the induced inflammation. Principal recommendations include the use of interrupted sutures and early immunosuppression with high-dose oral steroids at the onset of this condition together with the control of risk factors for microbial
keratitis
.
...
PMID:Sclerokeratitis after keratoplasty in atopy. 219 89
A 9-year-old boy was admitted to the Pediatric Department with high fever, severe
photophobia
, and a rash on his face, eyelids, and neck. Two days before admission he received injections of penicillin. During the night his general condition worsened, and his fever rose to 40 degrees C. He began to hallucinate, and clear fluid-filled blisters appeared on his skin and mouth. Severe photophobic epiphora, conjunctival injection, and punctate
keratitis
were also observed. Several hours after local administration of corticosteroids and antibiotic eye drops, his eyelids swelled severely, the corneas became covered by pseudomembranes, and later, in attempting to open the eyelids, the skin peeled off and the eye lashes fell out. Treatment consisted of artificial tear eye drops, and intravenous antibiotics and steroids. His condition improved gradually, visual acuity became 6/15 in both eyes, and a superficial punctate staining of the cornea was observed. The Schirimer test showed lacrimal hyposecretion. A tarsal conjunctival biopsy showed a complete absence of goblet cells. Vitamin A was administered topically and systemically. After three months of treatment with Vitamin A, tear secretion was almost normal, and conjunctival biopsy indicated a regeneration of goblet cells.
...
PMID:Vitamin A in Stevens-Johnson Syndrome. 276 32
The effects of a modified-live infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus vaccine (administered ocularly or intranasally) on experimentally induced infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis were evaluated. The modified-live infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus vaccine was administered to 13 male Holstein calves (intranasally in 4 and ocularly in 9; day 0). Five calves were not vaccinated and served as controls. Calves were examined daily and, starting on day 4, Moraxella bovis was administered ocularly to all 18 calves once daily for 4 days. The eyes of all calves were assigned a clinical score, and the ocular secretions were evaluated for presence of infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus and M bovis daily until day 19. The severity of the ocular lesions was estimated by scoring the lesions clinically and by determining the protein concentration, myeloperoxidase activity, and WBC count in the tears. By day 5, conjunctivitis, chemosis, and epiphora were observed in all of the calves vaccinated ocularly. The calves vaccinated intranasally developed conjunctival plaques, but did not develop chemosis or
photophobia
. All of the calves developed
keratitis
after inoculation with M bovis. The median lesion scores were greater in both groups of vaccinated calves than in the controls. Corneal perforations developed exclusively in the vaccinated calves. The frequency of M bovis isolation from ocular secretions was significantly (P less than 0.05) greater in the vaccinated calves than in the controls. The tears from the intranasally vaccinated calves contained the highest myeloperoxidase activity and WBC count. The mean protein concentration in the tears of vaccinated calves was not significantly different from that in tears of controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Enhancement of infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis by modified-live infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus vaccine. 285 4
A soft contact lens patient complained of persistent redness, blurry vision and
photophobia
of the right eye. Both tap water and distilled water were used in his contact lens care regimen. Atypical corneal epithelial dendriform patterns were noted and the patient was treated for presumed herpes simplex
keratitis
and corneal erosion. The definitive diagnosis of Acanthamoeba dendriform
keratitis
was made upon isolation of the offending organism from the patient's contact lens case. The clinical course is presented to help define early clinical signs of the disease.
...
PMID:Acanthamoeba dendriform keratitis. 291 6
Two young children with unilateral
photophobia
, redness, blepharospasm and corneal epithelial defects unresponsive to conservative therapy were seen between December 1982 and June 1983. Herpes simplex virus was established as the causal agent in both cases, only after the children had been examined under general anesthesia and appropriate cultures obtained. The difficulties in diagnosing herpetic
keratitis
in children and the treatment and long-term prognosis are discussed.
...
PMID:Nonhealing corneal defects due to herpes simplex in children. 360 99
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