Clinical and microbiological profile of infectious keratitis in children

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Abstract

Background: Infectious keratitis is a sight-threatening condition for children. The purpose of this study was to describe the clinical profile, risk factors and microbiological profile of infectious keratitis in children. Methods. Retrospective review of clinical records of patients under 16 years of age with history of microbial keratitis seen at a tertiary referral center. Clinical characteristics, risk factors, visual and surgical outcomes as well as the microbiological profile are analyzed. Results: Forty-one eyes of 41 patients. Mean age was 8.7 years. Time between the onset of symptoms and ophthalmological examination was 12.7 days. Predisposing factors were found in 78%; ocular trauma was the most common (25%). Visual acuity equal or worse than 20/200 at admission correlated positively with a poorer visual outcome, p=0.002. Positivity of cultures was 34%. Gram-positive bacteria were isolated in 78.5%; Staphylococcus epidermidis (28.6%) was the most common microorganism. Conclusions: Our study emphasizes the importance of a prompt diagnosis and treatment of infectious corneal ulcers in children. Trauma and contact lenses were the main predisposing factors. Gram-positive organisms were isolated in the vast majority of cases and visual outcomes are usually poor. © 2013 Chirinos-Saldaña et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Chirinos-Saldaña, P., Bautista De Lucio, V. M., Hernandez-Camarena, J. C., Navas, A., Ramirez-Miranda, A., Vizuet-Garcia, L., … Graue-Hernandez, E. O. (2013). Clinical and microbiological profile of infectious keratitis in children. BMC Ophthalmology, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2415-13-54

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