Fungal Keratitis

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Fungal Keratitis - Fungal Eye Invaders

  • Invasive corneal infection by fungi, a major cause of blindness, especially in agricultural settings.
  • Risk Factors: Ocular trauma (plant/soil), contact lenses, prolonged topical steroid use, systemic immunosuppression.
  • Common Causative Fungi:
    • Filamentous: Aspergillus (most frequent), Fusarium (severe, often post-vegetative trauma).
    • Yeast: Candida (chronic ocular surface disease, immunocompromised patients). Fungal Keratitis with Feathery Infiltrates and Hypopyon

Aspergillus flavus is the most common species in India; Fusarium keratitis is notorious for rapid progression.

Fungal Keratitis - Setting the Stage

  • Predisposing Factors:
    • Trauma: Vegetative matter (thorn, plant leaf) is classic.
    • Contact lens wear: Especially extended wear, poor hygiene.
    • Topical steroid use: Prolonged, unsupervised.
    • Ocular surface disease, immunosuppression.
  • Pathogenesis: Fungal adhesion, epithelial penetration, stromal invasion, inflammation.

Aspergillus and Fusarium are the most common filamentous fungi; Candida is the most common yeast.

Fungal Keratitis - Spotting the Spores

  • Symptoms: Intense pain, redness, photophobia, blurred vision, foreign body sensation.
  • Signs:
    • Corneal infiltrates: Greyish-white, dry texture, indistinct feathery margins.
    • Satellite lesions: Smaller infiltrates surrounding the main lesion (highly suggestive).
    • Endothelial plaque: Inflammatory cells on corneal endothelium.
    • Immune ring (Wessely's ring): Stromal infiltrate ring.
    • Hypopyon: Often dense, may be fixed.

⭐ Satellite lesions and feathery infiltrates are hallmark signs of fungal keratitis, distinguishing it from bacterial keratitis which typically has suppurative, well-defined infiltrates.

Fungal Keratitis - Unmasking the Mycosis

Diagnosing fungal keratitis involves several key steps to identify the causative organism.

Fungal keratitis patient approach with clinical images

  • Corneal Scraping: Essential for sample collection.
  • Microscopy:
    • KOH mount: Rapidly visualizes fungal hyphae.
    • Gram/Giemsa stains: Identify yeast, pseudohyphae.
    • Calcofluor white: Fluorescent stain, highlights fungal elements.
  • Culture: Sabouraud Dextrose Agar (SDA) is the gold standard.
  • Confocal Microscopy: In-vivo imaging of hyphae in cornea.
  • PCR: For rapid and specific fungal DNA detection.

⭐ Satellite lesions, feathery infiltrates, and an endothelial plaque are highly suggestive clinical signs of fungal keratitis, often prompting specific diagnostic pursuits like KOH mount and culture on SDA for confirmation.

Fungal Keratitis - Fungus Fight Club

  • Etiology: Filamentous fungi (Aspergillus, Fusarium: post-trauma) or Yeast (Candida: pre-existing ocular disease).
  • Risk Factors: Trauma (vegetative matter), chronic topical steroids, contact lens abuse, immunosuppression.
  • Clinical Hallmarks: Grey-white stromal infiltrate, feathery margins; satellite lesions; endothelial plaque; fixed hypopyon. Immune ring possible.
  • Diagnosis: Corneal scraping (KOH, Gram/Giemsa stain), culture on Sabouraud Dextrose Agar (SDA). Confocal microscopy aids.
  • Management Strategy:

⭐ Natamycin has poor corneal penetration; for deep filamentous infections, consider adding systemic voriconazole or using topical voriconazole.

Fungal Keratitis - Fungal Fallout

  • Grave Complications:
    • Corneal perforation, potentially leading to endophthalmitis.
    • Intractable secondary glaucoma, resulting in blindness.
  • Factors Worsening Prognosis:
    • High organism virulence (e.g., Fusarium spp.).
    • Deep stromal infiltration, larger lesion size.
    • Delayed antifungal therapy, host immunocompromise.

⭐ Sterile hypopyon is a characteristic finding in fungal keratitis, contrasting with bacterial cases.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Key risk factors: Trauma with vegetative matter, chronic topical steroid use.
  • Common causative agents: Aspergillus (most frequent), Fusarium (contact lens related), Candida (immunocompromised).
  • Characteristic signs: Feathery infiltrates, satellite lesions, endothelial plaque, immune ring; pain often less than signs.
  • Definitive diagnosis: Corneal scraping for KOH mount (hyphae), culture on Sabouraud Dextrose Agar (SDA).
  • Primary treatment: Topical Natamycin 5% (filamentous), Amphotericin B 0.15% or Voriconazole 1% (Candida/deep).
  • Resistant/severe cases: Systemic antifungals (e.g., Voriconazole) or therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty (TPK).

Practice Questions: Fungal Keratitis

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Which of the following statements is true regarding fungal corneal ulcers?

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Flashcards: Fungal Keratitis

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Drug of choice for fungal corneal ulcer:

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Drug of choice for fungal corneal ulcer:

Natamycin

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