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INFLAMMATION OF CONJUNCTIVA
[CONJUNCTIVITIS]
OPTOM FASLU MUHAMMED
 CONJUNCTIVITIS : Conjunctival Hyperemia
+
DISCHARGE
( Watery, Mucoid, Mucopurulent, Purulent)
CLINICAL SIGNS
• CONGESTION
• CHEMOSIS
• SUBCONJUNCTIVAL
HEMORRHAGES
• DISCHARGE
• MEMBRANE
• PAPILLAE
• FOLLICLES
• PSEUDOMEMBRANE
• PANNUS
• PRE AURICULAR
LYMPH NODES
CONGESTION
CHEMOSIS
SUBCONJUNCTIVAL HEMORRHAGES
DISCHARGE
MEMBRANE
PAPILLAE
FOLLICLES
PSEUDOMEMBRANE
PANNUS
CLASSIFICATION
ETIOLOGICAL CLINICAL
• INFECTIVE
• ALLERGIC
• IRRITATIVE
• KERATOCONJUNCTIVITIS
• WITH SKIN & MUCOUS MEMB
DISORDERS
•UNKNOWN ETIOLOGY
• TRAUMATIC
• ACUTE CATARRHAL/MUCOPURULENT
• ACUTE PURULENT
• SEROUS
• CHRONIC SINGLE
• ANGULAR
• MEMBRANOUS
• PSEUDOMEMBRANOUS
• PAPILLARY
• FOLLICULAR
• OPTHALMIA NEONATORUM
• GRANULAMATOUS
• ULCERATIVE
• CICATRISING
NATURAL PROTECTIVE
MECHANISMS IN THE CONJUCTIVA
 LOW TEMPERATURE - EXPOSURE TO AIR
 PHYSICAL PROTECTION BY LIDS
 FLUSHING ACTION OF TEARS
 ANTIBACTERIAL ACTIVITY OF LYSOZYMES
 HUMORAL PROTECTION BY THE TEAR
IMMUNOGLOBULINS
INFECTIVE CONJUNCTIVITIS
 INFLAMMATION OF THE CONJUNCTIVA CAUSED
BY MICRO-ORGANISMS IS THE COMMONEST
VARIETY.
TYPES
BACTERIAL SPIROCHAETAL
CHLAMYDIAL PROTOZOAL
VIRAL PARASITIC
FUNGAL OTHERS
RICKETTISIAE
BACTERIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS
SPORADIC
EPIDEMIC
(MONSOON)
• Staph. aureus
• Staph. Epidermidis
• Diphtheroids
• Corynebacterium xerosis
• Propioniobacterium acnes
NORMAL (NON-PATHOGENIC
COMMENSALS
ORGANISMS THAT INVADE
INTACT CORNEA
• Neisseria Gonorrhoea
• Corynebacterium
Diphtheriae
ETIOLOGY
 PREDISPOSING FACTORS
 CAUSATIVE ORGANISMS
 MODE OF INFECTION
ETIOLOGY
• Predisposing factors for bacterial
conjunctivitis, especially epidemic forms, are
flies, poor hygienic conditions, hot dry
climate, poor sanitation and dirty habits.
These factors help the infection to establish,
as the disease is highly contagious
• Mode of infection. Conjunctiva may get
infected from three sources, viz, exogenous,
local surro1. Exogenous infections may spread:
(i) directly through close contact, as air-borne
infections or as water-borne infections
(ii) through vector transmission (e.g., flies); (iii)
through material transfer EG infected fingers
of doctors, nurses, common towels,
handkerchiefs, and infected tonometers.
• 2. Local spread from neighbouring structures
like infected lacrimal sac, lids, and naso
pharynx. Also a change in the character of
relatively innocuous organisms present in the
conjunctival sac itself may cause infections.
• 3. Endogenous infections may occur very
rarely through blood e.g., gonococcal and
meningococcal infections
CAUSATIVE ORGANISMS
STAPH AUREUS BACRTERIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS
BLEPHARO CONJUNCTIVITIS
STAPH EPIDERMIDIS
(INNOCUOUS FLORA)
BLEPHARO CONJUNCTIVITIS
STREPTOCOCCUS PNEUMONIAE
(PNEUMOCOCCUS)
PETECHIAL SUBCONJUNCTIVIAL
HEMORRHAGES
STREPTOCOCCUS PYOGENES
(HEMOLYTICUS)
VIRULENT
PSEUDOMEMBRANOUS
CONJUNCTIVITIS
HEMOPHILUS INFLUENZA
(aegypticus koch –weeks bacillus
MUCUPURULENT CONJUNCTIVITIS (RED
EYE)
MORAXELLA LACUNATE
(Morax- Axenfeld bacillus)
Angular conjunctivitis
Angular BLEPHARO CONJUNCTIVITIS
PSEUDOMANAS PYOCYANEA
(Virulent)
Invades Cornea
NEISSIERIA GONORRHOEA ACUTE PURULENT CONJUNCTIVITIS
OPHTHALMIA NEONATORUM
NEISSIERIA MENINGIDIS MUCUPURULENT CONJUNCTIVITIS
CORYNEBACTERIUM DIPHTHERIAE MEMBRANOUS CONJUNCTIVITIS
PATHOLOGY
Severity depends on
- degree of inflammation
- causative organisms
1. VASCULAR RESPONSE
2. CELLULAR RESPONSE
3. CONJUNCTIVAL TISSUE RESPONSE
4. CONJUCTIVAL DISCHARGE
VASCULAR RESPONSE
• CONGESTION
• ↑ PERMEABILITY OF
CONJUNCTIVAL VESSELS
• CAPILLARY PROLIFERATION
CONJUNCTIVAL TISSUE RESPONSE
• EDEMA
• EPITHELIUM
• SUPERFICIAL CELLS : Degenerate
become loose desquamate.
• Basal Cells : Proliferate
• ↑ Goblet Cells
CELLULAR RESPONSE
Exudation of PMNs &
Inflammatory cells into
substantia propria &
conjunctivial SAC.
CONJUNCTIVAL DISCHAGE
MILD SEVERE
TEARS
MUCUS
INF. CELLS
DESQ. EPI. CELLS
FIBRIN
BACTERIA
DIAPEDISIS OF
RBC’S
+ ↓
BLOOD
STAINED
P
A
T
H
O
L
O
G
Y
CLINICAL TYPES OF BACTERIAL
CONJUNCTIVITIS:
• ACUTE MUCOPURULENT CONJUNCTIVITIS IS
the most common type of acute bacterial
conjunctivitis. characterised by marked
conjunctival hyperaemia and mucopurulent
discharge .
• Common causative bacteria are:
Staphylococcus aureus, Koch-Weeks bacillus,
Pneumococcus andStreptococcus.
Mucopurulent conjunctivitis accompanies
exanthemata such as measlesand scarlet fever.
Clinical picture
Symptoms
• Discomfort & f b sensation d/t engorgemt of
vessels.
• Mild photophobia,
• Mucopurulent discharge from the eyes.
• Sticking together of lid margins during sleep.
• Slight blurring of vision due to mucous flakes
infront of cornea.
• Sometimes coloured halos due to prismatic
effect of mucus present on cornea.
Signs
• Conjunctival congestion, more marked in
palpebral conjunctiva, fornices and peripheral
bulbar conjunctiva, ‘fiery red eye’. The
congestn is less marked in circumcorneal
zone.
• Chemosis i.e., swelling of conjunctiva.
• Petechial haemorrhages are seen when the
causative organism is pneumococcus.
• Flakes of mucopus are seen in the fornices,
canthi and lid margins.
• Cilia are usually matted together with yellow
crust
• Clinical course. Mucopurulent conjunctivitis
reaches its height in three to four days. If
untreated, in mild cases the infection may be
overcome and the condition is cured in 10-15
days; or it may pass to less intense form, the
‘chronic catarrhal conjunctivitis’.
• Complications. Occasionally
• complicated by marginal corneal ulcer,
superficial keratitis, blepharitis or
dacryocystitis.
• Differential diagnosis
• 1. From other causes of acute red eye .
• 2. From other types of conjunctivitis. It is made
out from the typical clinical picture of disease
and is confirmed by conjunctival cytology and
bacteriological examination of secretions and
scrapings .
Treatment
• 1. Topical antibiotics. Ideally, the antibiotic
should be selected after culture and sensitivity
tests. However, in routine, most of the
patients respond well to broad specturm
antibiotics. . newer antibiotic drops such as
ciprofloxacin (0.3%), ofloxacin (0.3%) or
gatifloxacin (0.3%) may be used.
• Dark goggles may be used to prevent
photophobia.
• No bandage should be applied in patients
with mucopurulent conjunctivitis
• Anti-inflammatory and analgesic drugs (e.g.
ibuprofen and paracetamol) may be given in
sensitive patients.
ACUTE PURULENT CONJUNCTIVITIS
• Acute purulent conjunctivitis also known as
acute blenorrhea or hyperacute conjunctivitis
is characterised by a violent inflammatory
response. It occurs in two forms:
(1) Adult purulent conjunctivitis
(2) Ophthalmia neonatorum in newborn
• Etiology
• affects adults, predominantly males.
• Commonest causative organism is
Gonococcus; but rarely it may be
Staphylococcus aureus or Pneumococcus.
Gonococcal infection directly spreads from
genitals to eye.
Clinical picture
• three stages:
1. Stage of infiltraton. It lasts for 4-5 days and is
• characterised by painful and tender eyeball.
• Bright red velvety chemosed conjunctiva.
• Lids are tense and swollen.
• Discharge is watery or sanguinous.
• Pre-auricular lymph nodes are enlarged.
• 2. Stage of blenorrhoea. It starts at about fifth
day, lasts for several days and is characterised
by:
• Frankly purulent, copious, thick discharge
trickling down the cheeks .
• Other symptoms are increased but tension in
the lids is decreased
• 3. Stage of slow healing. in this stage, pain is
decreased & swelling of the lids subsides.
• Conjunctiva remains red, thickened & velvety.
• Discharge diminishes slowly & in the end
resolution is complete.
• Associations. Gonococcal conjunctivitis is
usually associated with urethritis and arthritis.
Complications
• 1. Corneal involvement frequent as the gono
can invade an intact k epithelium. It may
occur in the form of diffuse haze and oedema,
central necrosis, corneal ulceration or even
perforation.
• 2. Iridocyclitis may also occur.
• 3. Systemic complications, though rare,
include gonorrhoea arthritis, endocarditis and
septicaemia.
INVESTIGATIONS
• Only in severe cases
• Conj scraping: gram’s stain
• Culture in chocalate agar or thayer martin
media
• PCR for resistant infns.
Treatment
1. Systemic therapy : more critical than topical
for N.gonorrhoeae and N. meningitidis.
• penicillin & tetracyline are no longer
adequate as first-line treatment.
• Norflox, Cefoxitim 1.0 gm or cefotaxime 500
mg. IV qi dor ceftriaxone 1.0 gm IM qid, all
for 5 days; or Spectinomycin 2.0 gm IM for 3
days.
All of the above regimes be followed
by a 1 week course of either doxycycline 100
mg bid or erythromycin 250-500 mg orally
qid.
2. Topical antibiotic therapy includes ofloxacin,
ciprofloxacin or tobramycin eye drops or
bacitracin or erythromycin eye ointment every
2 hours for the
first 2-3 days and then 5 times daily for 7 days.
3. Irrigation of the eyes frequently with sterile
saline : washing away infected debris.
4. Other general measures are similar to acute
mucopurulent conjunctivitis.
5. Topical atropine 1 per cent eye drops should
be instilled OD or BD if cornea is involved.
6. Patient and the sexual partner should be
referred for evaluation of other STD.
AC. MEMBRANOUS CONJUNCTIVITIS
• an acute inflammation of the conjunctiva,
charac by formation of a true membrane on the
conjunctiva.
• Now VERY RARE, because of markedly
decreased incidence of diphtheria.
• Etiology : The disease is typically caused by
Corynebacterium diphtheriae and occasionally
by virulent type of Streptococcus haemolyticus
Pathology
• Corynebacterium diphtheriae produces a
violent inflammation of the conjunctiva,
associated with deposn of fibrinous exudate
on the surface as well as in the substance of
the conjunctiva resulting in formation of a
membrane. Usually in the palpebral
conjunctiva.
• There is associated coagulative necrosis,
resulting in sloughing of membrane.
Ultimately healing takes place by granulation
tissue.
Clinical features
• usually affects children between 2-8 years of
age who are not immunised against diphth.
may have a mild or very severe course. The
child is toxic and febrile.
• three stages:
1. Stage of infiltration is characterised by:
• Scanty conjunctival discharge and severe pain
in the eye.
• Lids are swollen and hard.
• Conjunctiva is red, swollen and covered with a
thick grey-yellow membrane which is tough &
firmly adherent to the conj, which on
removing bleeds and leaves behind a raw
area. Pre-auricular lymph nodes are enlarged.
• 2. Stage of suppuration. In this stage, pain
decreases and the lids become soft. The
membrane is sloughed off leaving a raw
surface. There is copious outpouring of
purulent discharge.
3. Stage of cicatrisation. In this stage, the raw
surface covered with granulation tissue is
epithelised. Healing occurs by cicatrisation,
which may cause trichiasis and conjunctival
xerosis
• Complications1. Corneal ulceration is a
frequent complication in acute stage. The
bacteria may even involve the intact corneal
epithelium.
• 2. Delayed complications due to cicatrization
include symblepharon, trichiasis, entropion
and conjunctival xerosis.
• Diagnosis
• Diagnosis is made from typical clinical features
and confirmed by bacteriological examination.
Treatment
A. Topical therapy
• 1. Penicillin eye drops (1:10000 units per ml)
should be instilled every half hourly.
• 2. Antidiphtheric serum (ADS) should be
instilled every one hour.
• 3. Atropine sulfate 1 percent ointment should
be added if cornea is ulcerated.
• 4. Broad spectrum antibiotic ointment should
be applied at bed time.
• B. Systemic therapy
• 1. Crystalline penicillin 5 lac units should be
injected intramuscularly BD for 10 days.
• 2. (ADS) (50 thousand units) im stat.
• C. Prevention of symblepharon
Once the membrane is sloughed off, sym
blepharon which be prevented by applying
contact shell or sweeping the fornices with a
glass rod smeared with ointment.
• Prophylaxis
• 1. Isolation of patient
• 2. Proper immunization against diphtheria
PSEUDOMEMBRANOUS CONJ
• It is a type of acute conjunctivitis, charac by
formation of a pseudomembrane (which can
be easily peeled off leaving behind intact
conjunctival epithelium) on the conjunctiva.
• Etiology
• 1. Bacterial infection. Commonly Coryne
bacterium diphtheriae of low virulence,
staphylococci, streptococci, H. influenzae and
N. gonorrhoea..
• 2. Viral infections such as herpes simplex and
adenoviral epidemic keratoconjunctivitis may
be associated with pseudomembrane formn.
• 3. Chemical irritants such as acids, ammonia,
lime, silver nitrate and copper sulfate are also
known to cause formation of such membrane
• Pathology inflammation of conjunctiva
associated with pouring of fibrinous exudate
on its surface which coagulates and leads to
formation of a pseudomembrane.
• Clinical picture
• Pseudomembranous conjunctivitis is charac by
Acute m p conjunctivitis, like features assoc
with Pseudomembrane formation which is
thin yellowish-white membrane seen in the
fornices and on the palpebral conjunctiva .
• Pseudomembrane can be peeled off easily and
does not bleed.
• Treatment
similar to m p conjunctivitis
CHRONIC CATARRHAL
CONJUNCTIVITIS
• also known as ‘simple chronic conjunctivitis’ is
charac by mild catarrhal inflamm of the conj.
• Etiology A. Predisposing factors
1. Chr exposure to dust, smoke, & chem irritants.
2. Local cause of irritation such as trichiasis,
concretions, f b & seborrhoeic scales.
3. Eye strain d/t ref errors, phorias or conv insuff.
4. Abuse of alcohol, insomnia and metabolic
disorders
• B. Causative organisms
• Staphylococcus aureus : commonest cause .
• Gram negative rods such as Proteus mirabilis,
Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli and
Moraxella lacunata are other rare causes
• C. Source and mode of infection.
• 1. As continuation of acute mp conjunctivitis
when untreated or partially treated.
• 2. As chr infection fm chr dacryocystitis , chr
rhinitis or chronic upper respiratory catarrh.
• 3. As mild exogen infectn which results fm dir
contact, air-borne or material transfer of infn
Clinical picture
• Symptoms of simple chronic conjunctivitis inc:
• Burning and grittiness in the eyes, especially
in the evening.
• Mild chronic redness in the eyes.
• Feeling of heat & dryness on the lid margins.
• Difficulty in keeping the eyes open.
• Mild mucoid discharge esp in the canthi.
• Off and on lacrimation.
• Feeling of sleepiness and tiredness in the eyes
Signs. Grossly the eyes look normal but careful
examination may reveal following signs:
• Congestion of posterior conjunctival vessels.
• Mild papillary hypertrophy of the palpebral
conjunctiva.
• Surface of the conjunctiva looks sticky.
• Lid margins may be congested.
Treatment
1. Predisposing factors when associated should
be treated and eliminated.
2. Topical antibiotics such as chloramphenicol or
gentamycin should be instilled 3-4 times a day
for about 2 weeks to eliminate the mild
chronic infection.
3. Astringent eye drops such as zinc-boric acid
drops provide symptomatic relief.
ANGULAR CONJUNCTIVITIS
• a type of chr conjunctivitis charac by mild
inflammation confined to the conj & lid
margins near the angles associated with
maceration of the surrounding skin.
• Etiology
1. Predisp factors same as for 'simp chr conj.
• 2. Causative organisms. Moraxella Axenfeld is
commonest causative organism. so the
disease is also called 'diplobacillary conjunc'.
Rarely, staph may also cause angular conj.
• 3. Source of infection is usually nasal cavity.
• 4. Mode of infection. transmitted fm nasal
cavity to the eyes by contam fingers or hanky.
• Pathology The MA bacillus prod a proteolytic
enzyme which acts by macerating the
epithelium. This enzyme collects at the angles
by the action of tears & thus macerates the
epithelium of the conjunctiva, lid margin &
the skin the surr angles of eye. The
maceration is foll by vascular and cellular
responses in the form of mild grade chronic
inflammation. Skin may show eczematous
changes.
Clinical picture
• Symptoms
• Irritation, smarting sensation and feeling of
discomfort in the eyes.
• History of collection of dirty-white foamy
discharge at the angles.
• Redness in the angles of eyes.
• Signs include:
• Hyperaemia of bulbar conjunctiva near the
canthi.
• Hyperaemia of lid margins near the angles.
• Excoriation of the skin around the angles.
• Presence of foamy mucopurulent discharge at
the angles.
• Complications : blepharitis and shallow
marginal catarrhal corneal ulceration
• Treatment
A. Prophylaxis includes treatment of associated
nasal infection and good personal hygiene.
B. Curative treatment consists of :
• 1. Oxytetracycline (1%) eye ointment 2-3 times
a day for 9-14 days will eradicate the infection.
• 2. Zinc lotion instilled in day time and zinc
oxide ointment at bed time inhibits the
proteolytic ferment and thus helps in reducing
the maceration.
CHLAMYDIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS
• Chlamydia :Like viruses are obligate intra
cellular and filterable, whereas like bacteria
contain both DNA and RNA, divide by binary
fission & r sensitive to antibiotics. PLT group
• Life cycle of the chlamydia. The infective
particle invades the cytoplasm of epithelial
cells, where it swells up and forms the 'initial
body'. They rapidly divide into 'elementary
bodies‘ embedded in glycogen matrix which
are liberated when the cells burst. Then the
'elementary bodies' infect other cells where
the whole cycle is repeated
• Jones' classification. three classes :
Class 1 : Blinding trachoma. refers to hyper
endemic trachoma caused by serotypes A, B,
Ba and C of Chlamydia trachomatis associated
with secondary bacterial infection.transmitted
from eye to eye by transfer of ocular discharge
• Class 2 : Non-blinding trachoma. Chlamydia
trachomatis serotypes A, B, Ba, and C; but is
usually not associated with secondary
bacterial infections. It occurs in mesoendemic
or hypoendemic areas with better socio
economic conditions. is a mild form of disease
with ltd transmission d/t improved hygiene.
Class 3: Paratrachoma. oculogenital chlamydial
disease caused by serotypes D to K of
chlamydia trachomatis.
• It spreads from genitals to eye and mostly
seen in urban population. It manifests as
either adult inclusion conjunctivitis or
ophthalmia neonatorum
TRACHOMA
• Trachoma (previously known as Egyptian
ophthalmia) is a chronic keratoconjunctivitis,
affecting the superficial epithelium of conj and
cornea simultaneously.
• It is charac by a mixed follicular and papillary
response.
• leading causes of preventable blindness .
• 'trachoma' :Greek word for 'rough' which
describes the surface appearance of the
conjunctiva in chronic trachoma
Etiology
• A. Causative organism. Bedsonian organism,
the Chlamydia trachomatis belonging to the
(PLT) group. The organism is epitheliotropic
and produces intracytoplasmic inclusion
bodies called H.P. bodies (Halberstaedter
Prowazeke bodies). Presently, 11 serotypes of
chlamydia, (A, B, Ba, C, D, E, F, G, H, J and K)
have been identified using microimmuno
fluorescence techniques.
• Serotypes A, B, Ba and C are associated with
hyperendemic (blinding) trachoma, while D-K
are associated with paratrachoma .
B. Predisposing factors.
• 1. Age. infancy & early childhood.
• 2. Sex. in females ( in number & in severity)
• 3. Race. very common in Jews and less
common among Negroes.
• 4. Climate. dry and dusty weather.
• 5. Socioeconomic status. in poor classes
owing to unhygienic , overcrowded,unsanitary
conditions, fly population, paucity of water,
lack of sep towels & handkys, & lack of
education abt spread of contagious diseases.
• 6. Env fact like dust, smoke, irritants , sunlight
• C. Source of infection. In endemic zones the
main source of infection is conj discharge of
affected person. Therefore, superimposed
bacterial infections help in transmission by
increasing the conjunctival secretions.
• D. Modes of infection.:
1. Direct spread of infection through contact by
air-borne or water-borne modes.
2. Vector transmission is common thru flies.
3. Material transfer occurs thru contaminated
fingers of doctors, nurses & contam tono
meters. Other sources are use of common
towel, handkerchief, bedding and surma-rods.
Clinical profile of trachoma
• Incubation period of trachoma varies from 5-
21 days. Onset is insidious (subacute),rarely it
may present in acute form.
• Clinical course of trachoma is determined by
the presence or absence of secondary
infection. In absence of infn , pure trachoma
is mild and symptomless. But, mostly the
picture is complicated by secondary infection.
In early stages it is clinically indistinguishable
from bacterial conjunctivitis & term
'trachomadubium' is used for this stage.
• Natural history. In an endemic area natural
history of trachoma is characterized by the
development of acute disease in the first
decade of life which continues with slow
progression, until the disease becomes
inactive in the second decade of life.
• The sequelae occur at least after 20 years of
the disease.
• Thus, the peak incidence of blinding sequelae
is seen in the fourth and fifth decade of life
Symptoms
• In the absence of secondary infection,
symptoms are minimal and include mild
foreign body sensation in the eyes, occasional
lacrimation, slight stickiness of the lids and
scanty mucoid discharge.
• In the presence of secondary infection, typical
symptoms of acute mucopurulent conjunctivitis
develop.
Signs
SIGNS
• A. Conjunctival signs
1. Congestion of upper tarsal & forniceaL conJ.
2. Conjunctival follicles. commonly seen on
upper tarsal conjunctiva and fornix; but may
also be present in the lower fornix, plica
semilunaris and caruncle. Sometimes, (follicles
may be seen on the bulbar conjunctiva
(pathognomic of trachoma).
• Structure of follicle. Follicles are aggregation of
lymphocytes & other cells in the adenoid
layer. Central part of each follicle is made up
of mononuclear histiocytes, few lymphocytes
and large multinucleated cells called Leber
cells. The cortical part is made up of a zone of
lymphocytes showing active proliferation.
Blood vessels are present in the most
peripheral part. In later stages signs of
necrosis are also seen. Presence of Leber cells
and signs of necrosis differentiate trachoma
follicles from follicles of other forms of
follicular conjunctivitis.
TI FOLLICULAR
• 3. Papillary hyperplasia. Papillae are reddish,
flat topped raised areas which give red and
velvety appearance to the tarsal conjunctiva .
• Each papilla consists of central core of
numerous dilated blood vessels surrounded by
lymphocytes and covered by hypertrophic
epithelium.
TI INTENSE
• Conjunctival scarring which may be irregular,
star-shaped or linear. Linear scar present in
the sulcus subtarsalis is called Arlt's line.
• 5. Concretions may be formed due to
accumulation of dead epithelial cells and
inspissated mucus in the depressions called
glands of Henle.
B. Corneal signs
• 1. Superficial keratitis may be present in the
upper part.
• 2. Herbert follicles refer to typical follicles
present in the limbal area. These are
histologically similar to conjunctival follicles.
• 3. Pannus i.e., infiltration of the cornea
associated with vascularization is seen in
upper part . The vessels are superficial and lie
between epithelium and Bowman's
membrane. Later on Bowman's membrane is
also destroyed. Pannus may be progressive or
regressive.
• In progressive pannus, infiltration of cornea is
ahead of vascularization.
• In regressive pannus (pannus siccus) vessels
extend a short distance beyond the area of
infiltration.
• 4. Corneal ulcer may sometime develop at the
advancing edge of pannus. Such ulcers are
usually shallow which may become chronic
and indolent.
• 5. Herbert pits are the oval or circular pitted
scars, left after healing of Herbert follicles, the
limbal area .
• 6. Corneal opacity may be present in the upper
part. It may even extend down and involve the
pupillary area. It is the end result of
trachomatous corneal lesions.
1 Active trachoma is most common in pre-
school children and is charac BY Mixed
follicular/papillary conjunctivitis + muco
purulent discharge. In children under 2 years
the papillary component may predominate.
Superior epithelial keratitis and pannus
formation .
2 Cicatricial trachoma is most prevalent in
middle age.
Grading of trachoma
• McCallan's classification 1908
• Stage I (Incipient trachoma or stage of
infiltration). characterized by hyperaemia of
palpebral conjunctiva and immature follicles.
• Stage II (Established trachoma or stage of
florid infiltration). characterized by
appearance of mature follicles, papillae and
progressive corneal pannus
• Stage III (Cicatrising trachoma or stage of
scarring). obvious scarring of palpebral conj.
• Stage IV (healed trachoma or stage of
sequelae). disease is cured but sequelae due
to cicatrisation give rise to symptoms.
• WHO classification 1987 (FISTO):
• 1. TF: Trach inflam-follicular. : stage of active
trachoma with follicular inflammation. at
least 5 or more follicles ( 0.5 mm or more in
dia) must be present on the utc. Further, the
deep tarsal vessels should be visible through
the follicles and papillae.
• 2. TI : Trachomatous inflammation intense.
This stage has pronounced inflammatory
thickening of the upper tarsal conjunctiva
obscures more than half of the normal deep
tarsal vessels.
• 3. TS: Trachomatous scarring. This stage is
diagnosed by the presence of scarring in the
tarsal conjunctiva. These scars are easily
visible as white, bands or sheets (fibrosis) in
the tarsal conjunctiva
• 4. TT Trachomatous trichiasis.: labelled when
at least 1 eyelash rubs the eyeball. recent
removal of inturned eyelashes also graded as
• 5. CO: Corneal opacity. This stage is labelled
when easily visible corneal opacity is present
over the pupil. This sign refers to corneal
scarring that is so dense that at least part of
pupil margin is blurred when seen through the
opacity.
• The definition is intended to detect corneal
opacities that cause significant visual
impairment (less than 6/18).
Sequelae of trachoma
1. Sequelae in the lids may be trichiasis
entropion, tylosis (thickening of lid margin),
ptosis, madarosis and ankyloblepharon.
2. Conjunctival sequelae include concretions,
pseudocyst, xerosis and symblepharon.
3. Corneal sequelae may be corneal opacity,
ectasia, corneal xerosis and total corneal
pannus (blinding sequelae).
4. Other sequelae may be chronic dacryocystitis,
and chronic dacryoadenitis
• Complications
• The only complication of trachoma is corneal
ulcer which may occur due to rubbing by
concretions, or trichiasis with superimposed
bacterial infection.
Diagnosis
• A. The clinical diagnosis is made from its
typical signs; at least 2 sets of signs should be
present :
1. Conjunctival follicles and papillae
2. Pannus progressive or regressive
3. Epithelial keratitis near superior limbus
4. Signs of cicatrisation or its sequelae
• Clinical grading of each case :as per WHO
classfication into TF, TI, TS, TT or CO.
• B. Laboratory diagnosis. Advanced
laboratory tests includes :
• 1. Conjunctival cytology. Giemsa stained
smears : a pred polymorphonuclear reaction
+plasma cells and Leber cells is suggestive.
• 2. Detection of inclusion bodies in conjunctival
smear by Giemsa stain, iodine stain or
immunofluorescent staining esp in active
trachoma
3. ELISA for chlamydial antigens.
4. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is also useful.
5. Isolation of chlamydia is : yolk-sac inoculatn
method and tissue culture technique.
• Standard single-passage McCoy cell culture
requires at least 3 days.
• 6. Serotyping of TRIC agents : by detecting
specific antibodies using micro-IF method.
Direct monoclonal fluorescent antibody
microscopy of conjunctival smear is rapid and
inexpensive.
Differential diagnosis
• 1. Trachoma with follicular hypertrophy from
acute adenoviral follicular conjunctivitis
(epidemic keratoconjunctivitis) asfollows :
• Distribution of follicles in trachoma on UTC
and fornix, while in EKC : LPC and fornix .
• Associated signs such as papillae and pannus
are characteristic of trachoma.
• In clinically indistinguishable cases, laboratory
diagnosis of trachoma helps in differentiation.
• 2. Trachoma with papillary hypertrophy
differentiated from palpebral form of VKC:
• Papillae large in size and cobble-stone
arrangement in spring catarrh.
• pH of tears is usually alkaline in spring catarrh
while in trachoma it is acidic,
• Discharge is ropy in spring catarrh.
• In trachoma, there may be associated follicles
and pannus.
• In clinically indistinguishable cases,
conjunctival cytology and other laboratory
tests for trachoma usually help in diagnosis.
Management
• The SAFE strategy for trachoma management
supported by the WHO and other agencies
encompasses Surgery for trichiasis, Antibiotics
for active disease, Facial hygiene, and
Environmental improvement.
• 1 Antibiotics should be administered to
those affected and to all family members. A
single antibiotic course is not always effective
in eliminating infection in an individual, and
communities may need to receive annual
treatment to suppress infection.
• A single dose of azithromycin (20 mg/kg up
to 1g) is the treatment of choice.
• Erythromycin 500 mg b.d. for 14 days is an
alternative for women of childbearing age.
• Topical 1% tetracycline ointment is less
effective than oral treatment; it should be
given for 6 weeks.
2 Facial cleanliness
3 Environmental improvement such as access
to adequate water and sanitation, as well as
control of flies, is important.
4 Surgery is aimed at relieving entropion and
trichiasis and maintaining complete lid closure
with bilamellar tarsal rotation
Management
• A. Treatment of active trachoma
• Antibiotics : locally or systemically, but topical
treatment ispreferred because: cheaper, no
systemic side-effECTS & effective against
associated bacterial conjunctivitis
• 1. Topical therapy regimes.:consists of 1
percent tetracycline or 1 percent erythromycin
eye ointment 4 times a day for 6 weeks or 20
percent sulfacetamide eye drops three times a
day along with 1 percent tetracycline eye
ointment at bed time for 6 weeks.
.
2. Systemic therapy
3. Combined topical and systemic: preferred
when the ocular infection is severe (TI) or in
associated genital infection.
(i) 1 per cent tetracycline or erythromycin eye
ointment QID for 6 weeks; and (ii)
tetracycline or erythromycin 250 mg orally 4
times a day for 2 weeks
• B. Treatment of trachoma sequelae
1. Concretions : removed with a hypodermic
needle.
2. Trichiasis treated by epilation, electrolysis or
cryolysis .
3. Entropion should be corrected surgically
• 4. Xerosis should be treated by artificial tears.
• C. Prophylaxis :reinfections and recurrences
are likely to occur.
• 1. Hygienic measures.health education on
trachoma . The use of common towel,
handkerchief, surma rods etc. should be
discouraged. A good environmental sanitation
will reduce the flies. A good water supply
would improve washing habits.
• 2. Early treatment of conjunctivitis. Every case
of conjunctivitis should be treated as early as
possible to reduce transmission of disease.
• 3. Blanket antibiotic therapy (intermittent
treatment). WHO : in endemic areas to
minimise the intensity and severity of disease.
The regime : apply 1 percent tetracycline eye
ointment twice daily for 5 days in a month for
6 months.
ADULT INCLUSN CONJUNCTIVITIS
• a type of acute follicular conjunctivitis with
mucopurulent discharge.
• sexually active young adults.
• Etiology serotypes D to K of Chlamydia
trachomatis. The primary source of infection is
urethritis in males and cervicitis in females.
• The transmission of infection : to eyes either
through contaminated fingers/ contaminated
water of swimming pools ( swimming pool
conjunctivitis).
Urogenital infection
1 In males chlamydia is the m c cause of non-
gonococcal urethritis (NGU), also termed non-
specific urethritis (NSU). Chlamydial urethritis
is frequently asymptomatic in men. C.
trachomatis may also cause epididymitis, and
can act as a trigger for Reiter's disease.
2 In females chlamydial urethritis typically
causes dysuria and discharge. It may progress
to pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), carrying
a risk of infertility; 5–10% of women with PID
develop perihepatitis (Fitz-Hugh–Curtis
Clinical features
Incubation period : 4-12 days.
Symptoms : Ocular discomfort, foreign body
sensation, Mild photophobia, and Muco
purulent discharge from the eyes.
Signs of inclusion conjunctivitis are:
• Conj hyperaemia, more marked in fornices.
• Acute follicular hypertrophy in LPC
• Superficial keratitis in upper half of cornea.
• superior micropannus may also occur.
• Pre-auricular lymphadenopathy
• Clinical course. benign course and often
evolves into the chr follicular conjunctivitis,
may develop mild conjunctival scarring and
superior corneal pannus.
• Differential diagnosis must be made from
other causes of acute follicular conjunctivitis.
TREATMENT
1 Referral to a genitourinary specialist is
mandatory, for exclusion of other STI,
contact tracing and pregnancy testing.
2 Systemic therapy
• Azithromycin 1 g repeated after 1 week is
drug of choice, a 2ND or a 3RD dose is
required in 30% of cases.
• Doxycycline 100 mg b.d. for 10 days
(tetracyclines are relatively contraindicated in
pregnancy/breastfeeding and in children
under 12 years of age).
• Erythromycin, amoxicillin and ciprofloxacin
are alternatives.
3 Topical antibiotics : erythromycin or tetra
cycline ointment : rapid relief of symptoms
4 Reduction of transmission risk abstinence
of sexual contact until completion of
treatment (1 week after azithromycin),
together with other precautions as for any
infectious conjunctivitis.
• Symptoms take weeks to settle, follicles &
corneal infiltrates can take months to resolve
due to a prolonged hypersensitivity response
to chlamydial antigen
Neonatal conjunctivitis
• Neonatal conjunctivitis (ophthalmi
neonatorum) Is conjunctival inflammation
developing within the first month of life.
• m c infection in neonates, up to 10%.
• identified as a specific entity distinct fM conj
in older infants because it is the result of
infecTn transm. fm mother to Child during
delivery.
• any discharge or even watering from the eyes
in 1st week of life should arouse suspicion as
tears are not formed till then.
Causes
• C. trachomatis, N. gonorrhoeae and occ HSV
(typically HSV-2), which may be associated
with severe ocular or systemic complications.
• Staph causes mild conjunctivitis; others inc
Streptococci, H influenzae & various Gram-
negative organisms.
• Topical prep used in prophylaxis against
infection , themselves cause conjunc irritation.
• Despite poor neonatal tear production, a
persistently mildly watery eye with recur bact
conj may be secondary to congenital NLDO.
• Source and mode of infection in three ways:
before birth, during birth or after birth.
• 1. Before birth infection is very rare through
infected liquor amnii in mothers with ruptured
membrances.
• 2. During birth. most common mode of
infection from the infected birth canal esp in
face presentation or forceps delivery.
• 3. After birth. Infection may occur during first
bath of newborn or from soiled clothes or
fingers with infected lochia.
Diagnosis
1 Timing of onset • Chem irritation: few
days.
• Gonococcal: first week.
• Staphy & other bact: end of the first wk.
• Herpes simplex: 1–2 weeks.
• Chlamydia: 1–3 weeks.
2 History • Instillation of a prophylactic
chemical preparation.
• Parental symptoms of sexually
transmitted infections.
• Recent conjunctivitis in close contacts.
• Systemic illness such as pneumonitis,
rhinitis and otitis in chlamydial infection, skin
vesicles and features of encephalitis in herpes
simplex.
• Prior persistent watering without
inflammation may indicate an uncanalized
nasolacrimal duct
• Incubation period
• It varies depending on the type of the
causative agent as shown below:
• Causative agent Incubation period
• 1. Chemical 4-6 hours
• 2. Gonococcal 2-4 days
• 3. Other bacterial 4-5 days
• 4. Neonatal inclusion conjunctivitis 5-14 days
• 5. Herpes simplex 5-7 days
• Signs • The type of discharge varies
according to the underlying cause.
• Reflux of mucopurulent material on
pressure over the lacrimal sac is suggestive of
delayed canalization of the lacrimal duct.
• Severe eyelid oedema occurs in
gonococcal infection .
• Eyelid and periocular vesicles may occur
in HSV infection.
• Keratitis in gonococcal or HSV infection.
Investigations
• Conjunctival scrapings for Gram and Giemsa
staining . Multinucleated giant cells may be
present on Gram stain in HSV infection.
• Conjunctival swabs for bacterial culture ON
chocolate agar or Thayer–Martin for N.
gonorrhoeae).
• Separate conjunctival scrapings PCR, ESP for
chlamydia.
• Conjunctival scrapings or fluid from skin
vesicles can be sent for viral culture for HSV.
Treatment
• 1 Prophylaxis Antenatal measures : care of
mother and treatment of genital infections
when suspected.
• 2. Natal measures.
• Deliveries should be conducted under
hygienic conditions taking aseptic measures.
• The newborn baby's closed lids should be
thoroughly cleansed and dried.
• 3. Postnatal measures includeno standard
protocol.
• A single instillation of povidone-iodine 2.5%
solution is eff against common pathogen
• Erythromycin 0.5% or tetracycline 1% ointmt
• Silver nitrate 1% solution agglutinates
gonococci . administered in conjunction with a
single intramuscular dose of benzylpenicillin
when maternal infection is present.
2 Chemical conjunctivitis does not require
treatment apart from artificial tears.
3 Mild conjunctivitis is very common in
neonates and may require a broad-spectrum
topical antibiotic such as chloramphenicol or
fusidic acid.
4 Moderate to severe cases should be
investigated as above.
• If bacteria evident on Gram stain, a broad-
spectrum topical antibiotic STARTED.
• Chlamydial infection is treated with oral
erythromycin for two weeks. Erythromycin or
tetracycline ointment can be used in addition
5 Severe conjunctivitis, or systemic illness
requires hospital admission.
• Gonococcal conjunctivitis :systemic third-
generation cephalosporin. Co-treatment for
chlamydia is prudent.
• Herpes simplex infection should always be
regarded as a systemic condition and is
treated with high-dose intravenous aciclovir
under paediatric specialist care. Early
diagnosis and treatment of encephalitis may
be life-saving or prevent serious neurological
disability. Topical aciclovir may be considered
in addition.
• 6 Specialist advice from a microbiologist or
paediatrician should be sought as appropriate
in patients with severe involvement,
particularly with systemic features. A
genitourinary specialist referral for the mother
and her sexual contacts is important when a
sexually-transmitted infection is diagnosed;
the neonate should also be screened for other
sexually-transmitted infection
Viral conj:Adenoviral conjunctivitis
• Pathogenesis : an adenovirus (a non-
enveloped double-stranded DNA virus).
• Infection : sporadic or in epidemics in
workplaces (including hospitals), schools and
swimming pools.
• spread facilitated by ability of virus to survive
on dry surfaces for weeks, viral shedding
occurs for many days before clinical features
• Transmission by contact with respiratory or
ocular secretions, including via fomites,
Presentation
• 1 Non-specific acute follicular conjunctivitis
most common . Ocular involvement is milder
than in other forms of adenoviral infection
although accompanying systemic symptoms
such as a sore throat or cold are frequent.
2 Pharyngoconjunctival fever (PCF) is
caused by adenovirus serovars 3, 4 and 7. It is
spread by droplets within families with upper
respiratory tract infection. Keratitis develops
in about 30% of cases but is seldom severe.
• 3 Epidemic keratoconjunctivitis (EKC) is
caused by adenovirus serovars 8, 19 and 37. It
is the most severe type and is associated with
keratitis in about 80% of cases.
4 Chronic/relapsing adenoviral
conjunctivitis, characterized by chronic non-
specific follicular/papillary lesions, is rare but
can persist for year
Signs
1 lid oedema & tender pre-auricular lnopathy.
2 Prominent conjunctival hyperaemia and
follicles .
3 Severe inflammation may be associated with
conjunctival haemorrhages (usually petechial
in adenoviral infection), chemosis, membranes
(rare) and pseudomembranes
4 Pseudomembranes or membranes with mild
conjunctival scarring after resolution
5 Keratitis is characterized by
• Epithelial microcysts during early stage.
• Punctate epithelial keratitis develops with
in 7–10 days of the onset of symptoms and
resolves within 2 weeks.
• Focal white subepithelial/anterior stromal
infiltrates may develop beneath the fading
epithelial lesions, probably as an immune
response to the virus , and may persist or
recur over months or years
6 Mild anterior uveitis is uncommon.
Differential diagnosis
1 Acute haemorrhagic conjunctivitis in
tropical areas and usually caused by entero
and coxsackievirus. a rapid onset & resolves
in 1–2 weeks; conj haemorrhages r seen
2 Herpes simplex virus (HSV) a follicular
conjunctivitis, , which is usually unilateral and
often associated with skin vesicle
3 Systemic viral infections ( varicella, measles
and mumps) follicular conjunctivitis.V-z v : a
conj as part of ophthalmic shingles. An HIV
conjunctivitis is also recognized.
Management
• Spontaneous resolutn in 2–weeks.
1 Investigations unnecessary; unless diag is in
doubt or the condition unresolved.
• Giemsa stain : mononuclear cells in adeno
conj & multinucleated giant cells in herpes.
• PCR are sensitive and specific for viral DNA.
• Viral culture with isolation is the reference
standard but expensive , slow (days–weeks),
and requires specific transport media.
• immunochromatography : detects adeno Ag
in tears; sensitivity & specificity are excellent.
2 Reduction of transmission risk hand
hygiene, avoidi eye rubbing & towel sharing.
disinfection of instruments & clinical surfaces
after examinatn of an infected patient (e.g.
sodium hypochlorite, povidone-iodine).
3 Topical steroids pred 0.5% q.i.d. in severe
memb or pseudomemb adenoviral conj.
Symptomatic keratitis : weak topical steroids;
use with caution : do not speed resolution
only suppress inflamm ; lesions recur after
premature stopping. Steroids enhance viral
replication & extend period of patients
infectivitys. IOP should be monitored.
• Other measures • Discontinuation of
contact lens wear until resolution.
• Artificial tears q.i.d. symptomatic relief.
• Cold (or warm) compresses for
symptomatic relief.
• Removal of symptomatic
pseudomembranes or membranes.
• Topical antibiotics if secondary bacterial
infection is suspected.
• Povidone-iodine is very effective against
free (although less so against intracellular)
adenovirus, and has been proposed as a
means of decreasing infectivity.
Molluscum contagiosum
conjunctivitis
• Pathogenesis :Molluscum contagiosum is a
skin infection caused by a human specific
double-stranded DNA poxvirus which typically
affects otherwise healthy children, with a peak
incidence between the ages of 2 and 4 years.
Transmission is by contact, with subsequent
autoinoculation. The eyelash line should be
examined carefully in patients with chronic
conjunctivitis so as not to overlook a
molluscum lesion
Diagnosis
1 Presentation is with chronic unilateral ocular
irritation and mild discharge.
2 Signs • A pale, waxy, umbilicated nodule
on the lid margin associated with follicular
conjunctivitis and mild mucoid discharge .
• Bulbar nodules and multiple cutaneous
lesions that may be confluent may occur in
immunocompromised patients.
• Untreated long-standing cases may
develop a fine epithelial keratitis and
sometimes pannus.
Treatment
• Although the lesions are self-limiting in the
immunocompetent, removal is often
necessary to address secondary conjunctivitis
or for cosmetic reasons. Expression is
facilitated by making a small nick in the skin at
the margin of the lesion with the tip of a
needle.
ALLERGIC CONJUNCTIVITIS
• immediate (humoral) or delayed (cellular).
• conj x 10 sensitive than skin to allergens .
• Types
1. Simple allergic conjunctivitis
• Hay fever conjunctivitis
• Seasonal allergic conjunctivitis (SAC)
• Perennial allergic conjunctivitis (PAC)
2. (VKC) 3. Atopic keratoconjunctivitis (AKC)
4. Giant papillary conjunctivitis (GPC)
5. Phlyctenular keratoconjunctivitis (PKC)
6. Contact dermoconjunctivitis (CDC)
SIMPLE ALLERGIC CONJUNCTIVITIS
• a mild, non-specific allergic conjunctivitis
charac by itching, hyperaemia & mild papillary
response. Basically, it is an acute or subacute
urticarial reaction.
• Etiology It is seen in following forms:
• 1. Hay fever conjunctivitis. It is commonly
associated with hay fever (allergic rhinitis).
The common allergens are pollens, grass and
animal dandruff..
• 2. Seasonal allergic conjunctivitis (SAC). SAC is
A response to seasonal allergens such as grass
pollens. It is of very common occurrence.
• 3. Perennial allergic conjunctivitis (PAC) is a
response to perennial allergens such as house
dust and mite. It is not so common
• Pathology
• 1. Vascular response is charac by sudden and
extreme vasodilation and increased
permeability of vessels leading to exudation.
• 2. Cellular response is in the form of
conjunctival infiltration and exudation in the
discharge of eosinophils, plasma cells and
mast cells producing histamine and histamine-
like substances.
• 3. Conjunctival response is in the form of
boggy swelling of conjunctiva followed by
increased connective tissue formation and
mild papillary hyperplasia.
• Clinical picture
• Symptoms include intense itching and
burning sensation in the eyes associated with
watery discharge and mild photophobia.
• Signs. (a) Hyperaemia and chemosis which
give a swollen juicy appearance to the
conjunctiva. (b) Conjunctiva may also show
mild papillary reaction. (c) Oedema of lids.
• Diagnosis
• Diagnosis is made from : (1) typical symptoms
and signs; (2) normal conjunctival flora; and
(3) presence of abundant eosinophils in the
discharge.
TREATMENT
1. Artificial tears for mild symptoms
2 Mast cell stabilizers (sodium cromoglicate,
nedocromil sodium, lodoxamide) are suitable
(except lodoxamide) for long-term use
3 Antihistamines (emedastine, epinastine,
levocabastine, bepotastine) for symptomatic
exacerbations and are as effective as mast
cell stabilizers
4 Combined preparation of an antihistamine
and a vasoconstrictor
5 Dual action antihistamine and mast cell
stabilizers (azelastine, ketotifen, olopatadine)
are often very effective for exacerbations.
6 Topical steroids are effective but rarely
necessary.
7 Oral antihistamines for severe symptoms.
Some, such as diphenhydramine, cause
significant drowsiness and may be useful in
aiding sleep; others such as loratadine have
less sedative action
VERNAL KERATOCONJUNCTIVITIS
OR SPRING CATARRH
• recurrent, bilateral, interstitial, self-limiting,
allergic inflammation having periodic
seasonal incidence.
• Etiology a hypersensitivity reaction to exoge
allergen, such as grass pollens. VKC is an
atopic allergic disorder , IgE-mediated mechs
play important role. personal or family
history of atopic diseases such as hay fever,
asthma, or eczema ; peripheral blood shows
eosinophilia and inceased serum IgE levels.
• Predisposing factors
• 1. Age and sex. 4-20 years; more common in
boys than girls.
• 2. Season. More common in summer; as
'Warm weather conjunctivitis'.
• 3. Climate. More prevalent in tropics, less in
temperate zones and almost non-existent in
cold climate.
• Pathology
• 1. Conjunctival epith : hyperplasia & sends
downward projections into subepith tissue.
• 2. Adenoid layer shows marked cellular
infiltration by eosinophils, plasma cells,
lymphocytes and histiocytes.
• 3. Fibrous layer shows proliferation which
later on undergoes hyaline changes.
• 4. Conjunctival vessels show proliferation,
increased permeability & vasodilation. All
these lead to formation of mulT pap in the
UTC
• Symptoms. Spring catarrh is characterised by
marked burning and itching sensation which is
usually intolerable and accentuated when
patient comes in a warm humid atmosphere.
• Itching is more marked with palpebral form of
disease.
• Other associated symptoms include: mild
photophobia, lacrimation, stringy (ropy)
discharge and heaviness of lids.
• Signs : three clinical forms:
1. Palpebral form. UsuallY UTC of b e is involved.
• The typical lesion is charac by the presence of
hard, flat topped, papillae arrged in a 'cobble-
stone' or 'pavement stone', fashion
• . In severe cases, papillae may hypertrophy to
produce cauliflower like excrescences of 'giant
papillae'.
• Conjunctival changes are associated with
white ropy discharge.
2. Bulbar form. It is characterised by:
(i) dusky red triangular congestion of bulbar
conjunctiva in palpebral area;
(ii) gelatinous thickened accumulation of tissue
around the limbus; and
(iii) presence of discrete whitish raised dots
along the limbus (Tranta's spots).
• 3. Mixed form. It shows combined features of
both palpebral and bulbar forms .
• Vernal keratopathy. Corneal involvement in
VKC may be primary or secondary to extensn
of limbal lesions. Vernal keratopathy includes
following 5 types of lesions:
• 1. Punctate epithelial keratitis involving upper
cornea is usually associated with palpebral
form of disease. The lesions always stain with
rose bengal and with fluorescein dye.
• 2. Ulcerative vernal keratitis (shield ulceratioN
a shallow transverse ulcer in upper part of
cornea. results due to epitheliaL macro
erosions.may be complicated by bacterial
keratitis.
• 3. Vernal corneal plaques result due to coating
of bare areas of epithelial macroerosions with
a layer of altered exudates .
• 4. Subepithelial scarring occurs in the form of
a ring scar.
• 5. Pseudogerontoxon is characterised by a
classical ‘cupid’s bow’ outline.
• Clinical course of disease is often self-limiting
and usually burns out spontaneously after 5-
10 years.
• Differential diagnosis. Palpebral form of VKC
needs to be differentiated from trachoma with
pre-dominant papillary hypertrophy
• A. Local therapy
• 1. Topical steroids. These are effective in all
forms of spring catarrh. However they
frequently cause steroid induced glaucoma.
monitoring of intraocular pressure. Frequent
instillation (4 hourly) to start with (2 days)
should be followed by maintenance therapy
for 3-4 times a day for 2 weeks.
• fluorometholone , betamethasone or
dexamethasone.
Treatment
• General measures
• 1 Allergen avoidance, if possible. An
allergy specialist opinion can be requested if
appropriate; allergen patch testing is
sometimes useful, but often gives non-specific
findings.
2 Cool compresses may be helpful.
3 Lid hygiene should be used for
associated staphylococcal blepharitis.
Moisturizing cream such as E45 can be applied
to dry fissured skin.
Local treatment
1 Mast cell stabilizers reduce frequency of
acute exacerbations & need for steroids, al
though seldom effective in isolation. Sev days
of treatment are needed & in some cases
long-term therapy may be needed. In some
patients adding a NSAID (ketorolac, diclofe
nac) may give added benefit.
2 Antihistamines are suitable for acute
exacerbations but generally not for long-term
use. A trial of several different agents may be
worthwhile.
3 Combined preparations of an antihistamine
and a vasoconstrictor usually offer only
limited relief while dual action antihistamine
/mast cell stabilizers are often effective.
4 Steroids are used for (a) severe exacerbation
of conjunctivitis and (b) sig keratopathy in
which reducing conjunctival activity leads to
corneal improvement.
• Steroids (fluorometholone 0.1%, rimexolone
1%, prednisolone 0.5% or loteprednol
etabonate 0.2% or 0.5%) are prescribed in
short but intensive courses, aiming for prompt
tapering.
• Stronger prep like prednisolone 1% can be
used but carry a higher risk of steroid-induced
glaucoma.
• Supratarsal steroid injection considered in
severe palpebral disease, for non-compliance
or patients resistant to conventional therapy.
injection is given into the conjunctival surface
of the anaesthetized everted upper eyelid;
0.1 mL of betamethasone sodium phosphate
4 mg/mL (Betnesol), dexamethasone 4 mg/mL
or triamcinolone 40 mg/mL is given.
• 5 Immune modulators a Ciclosporin
0.05% b.d. indicated if steroids are ineffective,
inadequate or poorly tolerated, or as a
steroid-sparing agent in patients with severe
disease. The drug may cause ocular irritation
and blurred vision when used for several
weeks and relapses occur if stopped suddenly.
b Tacrolimus 0.03% ointment can be
effective in AKC for severe eyelid disease.
Instillation into the fornices has been effective
in modulating conjunctival inflammation in
refractory cases.
• 6 Other measures a Antibiotics are used
in conjunction with steroids in severe
keratopathy to prevent or treat bacterial
infection.
b Acetylcysteine is a mucolytic agent that
is useful in VKC for dissolving mucus filaments
and deposits, and addressing early plaque
formation
Systemic treatment
1 Antihistamines help itching, promote sleep
and reduce nocturnal eye rubbing. Because
other inflammatory mediators are involved
besides histamines, effectiveness is not
assured.
2 Antibiotics (doxycycline 50–100 mg daily
for 6 weeks or azithromycin 500 mg once daily
for 3 days) to reduce blepharitis-aggravated
inflammation, usually in AKC.
• 3 Immunosuppressive agents (e.g.
steroids, ciclosporin, tacrolimus, azathioprine)
may be effective at relatively low doses in AKC
unresponsive to other measures. Short
courses of high-dose steroids may be
necessary to achieve rapid control in severe
disease. Monoclonal antibodies against T cells
have shown some promise in refractory cases.
4 Aspirin may be useful in VKC, although
the risk of Reye's syndrome means it should
be avoided in children and adolescents (the
group predominantly affected by VKC)
• Surgery
1 Bandage contact lens wear : aid the
healing of persistent epithelial defects.
2 Superficial keratectomy reqd to remove
plaques or debride shield ulcers and allow
epithelialization. Med treatmt be maintained
until the cornea has reepithelialized in order
to prevent recurrences. Excimer laser PTK is an
alternative.
• 3 Surface maintenance-restoration surgery
amniotic membrane overlay grafting or LK, or
eyelid procedures such as botulinum toxin-
induced ptosis or lateral tarsorrhaphy, may be
required for severe persistent epithelial
defects or ulceration. Gluing may be
appropriate for focal (‘punched-out’) corneal
perforations
Atopic keratoconjunctivitis (AKC)
• an adult equivalent of vernal KC and assoc
with atopic dermatitis. Most of the patients
are young atopic adults, with male
predominance.
Symptoms include:
• Itching, soreness, dry sensation.
• Mucoid discharge.
• Photophobia or blurred vision.
Signs :Lid margins chron inflamed with rounded
posterior borders.
• Skin changes consist of erythema, dryness,
scaliness and thickening, sometimes with
fissuring, and scratches (‘excoriation’) due to
intense itching.
• Assoc staphy blepharitis and madarosis
• Keratinization of the lid margiIN
• Hertoghe sign is characterized by absence of
the lateral portion of the eyebrows
• Tightening of the facial skin may cause lower
lid ectropion and epiphora.
• Conj involvement is pref inferior palpebral, in
VKC superiorly.
• Discharge is more watery than in VKC.
• Papillae initially smaller than VKC ; larger
lesions develop later
• Diffuse conjunctival infiltration and scarring
may give a whitish, featureless appearance
• Cicatricial changes lead to mod sym
blepharon, forniceal shortening, keratinization
of the caruncle
• Limbal involvement , including Horner–Trantas
dots, Tarsal conjunctiva has milky app. There
are very fine papillae, hyperaemia and
scarring with shrinkage.
• Keratopathy a Punctate epithelial erosions
over inferior third of the cornea are common
b Persistent epithelial defects, with
associated focal thinning, can occasionally
progress to perforation.
c Plaque formation may occur.
d Peripheral vascularization and stromal
scarring are more common than in VKC.
e Other manifestations
• Predisposition to secondary bacterial and
fungal infection, and to aggressive herpes
simplex keratitis
• Keratoconus is common (about 15%) and
secondary to chronic ocular rubbing.
• 5 Cataract • Presenile shield-like anterior
or posterior subcapsular cataracts are
common , exacer by long-term steroid RX
• Because of the high lid margin carriage of
S. aureus, cataract surgery carries an
increased risk of endophthalmitis.
6 Retinal detachment is more common
than in the general population corneal
vascularization, thinning and plaques.
Clinical course. Like the dermatitis with which it
is associated, AKC has a protracted course
with exacerbations and remissions. Like vernal
keratoconjunctivitis it tends to become
inactive when the patient reaches the fifth
decade.
Treatment is often frustrating.
• Treat facial eczema and lid margin disease.
• Same as VKC
Giant (mechanically-induced)
papillary conjunctivitis
• Pathogenesis :Mechanically-induced papillary
conjunctivitis, the severe form of which is
known as giant papillary conjunctivitis (GPC),
can occur secondary to a variety of
mechanical stimuli of the tarsal conjunctiva. It
is most frequently seen with contact lens (CL)
wear, when it is termed contact lens-
associated papillary conjunctivitis (CLPC).
• The risk is increased by the build-up of
proteinaceous deposits and cellular debris on
the contact lens surface . Ocular prostheses,
exposed sutures and scleral buckles, corneal
surface irregularity and filtering blebs can all
be responsible. A related phenomenon is the
so-called ‘mucus fishing syndrome’, when, in a
variety of underlying anterior segment
disorders, patients develop or exacerbate a
chronic papillary reaction due to repetitive
manual removal of mucus
Diagnosis
1 Symptoms foreign body sensation, redness,
itching, increased mucus production, blurring
and loss of CL tolerance. Symptoms may be
worse after lens removal. Patients should be
questioned about CL cleaning and
maintenance.
2 Signs • Variable mucous discharge.
• Protein deposits on the CL.
• Excessive CL mobility .
• Superior tarsal hyperaemia and initially
fine-medium size papillae (>0.3 mm).
• Focal apical ulceration and whitish scarring
may develop on larger papillae in advanced
cases.
• Keratopathy is rare because of the
relatively subdued secretion of inflammatory
cytokines.
• Ptosis may occur mainly as a result of
irritative spasm and tissue laxity secondary to
chronic inflammation.
Treatment
1 Remove the stimulus • CL wear should
be discontinued for several weeks .
• For mild–moderate disease, this may be
adequate for resolution, sometimes in
conjunction with reduced wearing time.
• In severe disease a longer interval without
lens wear may be needed.
• Removal of other underlying causes such as
exposed sutures or scleral buckle.
• Assessmt of the status & fit of oc prosthesiS
• Refashioning filtering blebs or GDD.
• 2 Ensure effective cleaning of CL or
prosthesis • Changing the type of CL
solution, ESP preservative-containing prep.
• Switching to mthly then daily disposable
CL if the condition persists after renewing
non-disposable lenses.
• Rigid lenses carry a lesser risk of CLPC
(5%) because they are easier to clean .
• Cessation of CL wear and substituting
spectacles or refractive surgery for severe or
refractory disease.
• Regular (at least weekly) use of contact lens
protein removal tablets.
• Prostheses should be cleaned & polished
• Topical • Mast cell stabilizers should be non-
preserved in patients wearing soft contact
lenses, or can be instilled when the lenses are
not in the eye, with a delay of perhaps half an
hour after drop instillation prior to lens
insertion. can be continued long-term .
.
• Antihistamines, non-steroidal anti-
inflammatory agents and combined
antihistamines/mast cell stabilizers may each
be of benefit.
• Topical steroids can be used for the acute
phase of resistant cases, particularly those
where effective removal of the stimulus is
difficult, as in bleb-related disease
PHLYCTENULAR
KERATOCONJUNCTIVITIS
• Phlyctenular keratoconjunctivitis is a
characteristic nodular affection occurring as
an allergic response of the conjunctival and
corneal epithelium to some endogenous
allergens to which they have become
sensitized. Phlyctenular conjunctivitis is of
worldwide distribution. However, its incidence
is higher in developing countries.
• Etiology It is believed to be a delayed
hypersensitivity (Type IV-cell mediated)
response to endogenous microbial proteins.
I. Causative allergens
1. Tuberculous proteins were considered,
previously, as the most common cause.
• 2. Staphylococcus proteins are now thought to
account for most of the cases.
• 3. Other allergens may be proteins of
Moraxella Axenfeld bacillius and certain
parasites (worm infestation).
• II. Predisposing factors
• 1. Age. Peak age group is 3-15 years.
• 2. Sex. Incidence is higher in girls than boys.
• 3. Undernourishment. Disease is more
common in undernourished children.
• 4. Living conditions. Overcrowded &
unhygienic.
• 5. Season. It occurs in all climates but
incidence is high in spring and summer
seasons.
Pathology
• 1. Stage of nodule formation. In this stage
there occurs exudation and infiltration of
leucocytes into the deeper layers of
conjunctiva leading to a nodule formation.
The central cells are polymorphonuclear and
peripheral cells are lymphocytes.
• The neighbouring blood vessels dilate and
their endothelium proliferates.
• 2. Stage of ulceration. Later on necrosis occurs
at the apex of the nodule and an ulcer is
formed. Leucocytic infiltration increases with
plasma cells and mast cells.
• 3. Stage of granulation. Eventually floor of the
ulcer becomes covered by granulation tissue.
• 4. Stage of healing. Healing occurs usually
with minimal scarring
Clinical picture
• Symptoms in simple phlyctenular
conjunctivitis are few, like mild discomfort in
the eye, irritation and reflex, watering.
However there is associated mucopurulent
conjunctivitis due to secondary bacterial
infection.
• Signs. The phlyctenular conjunctivitis can
present in three forms: simple, necrotizing
and miliary.
• 1. Simple phylctenular conjunctivitis. It is the
most commonly seen variety. It is
characterised by the presence of a typical
pinkish white nodule surrounded by
hyperaemia on the bulbar conjunctiva, usually
near the limbus. Most of the times there is
solitary nodule but at times there may be two
nodules . In a few days the nodule ulcerates at
apex which later on gets epithelised. Rest of
the conjunctiva is normal.
• 2. Necrotizing phlyctenular conjunctivitis is
characterised by the presence of a very large
phlycten with necrosis and ulceration leading
to a severe pustular conjunctivitis.
• 3. Miliary phlyctenular conjunctivitis is
characterised by the presence of multiple
phlyctens which may be arranged haphazardly
or in the form of a ring around the limbus and
may even form a ring ulcer.
Phlyctenular keratitis
• . Corneal involvement may occur secondarily
from extension of conjunctival phlycten; or
rarely as a primary disease. It may present in
two forms: the 'ulcerative phlyctenular
keratitis' or 'diffuse infiltrative keratitis
A. Ulcerative phlyctenular keratitis may occur
in the following three forms:
• 1. Sacrofulous ulcer is a shallow marginal ulcer
formed due to breakdown of small limbal
phlycten
• . It differs from the catarrhal ulcer in that
there is no clear space between the ulcer and
the limbus and its long axis is frequently
perpendicular to limbus. Such an ulcer usually
clears up without leaving any opacity.
• 2. Fascicular ulcer has a prominent parallel
leash of blood vessels . This ulcer usually
remains superficial but leaves behind a
bandshaped superficial opacity after healing.
• 3. Miliary ulcer. In this form multiple small
ulcers are scattered over a portion of or whole
of the cornea.
• B. Diffuse infiltrative phlyctenular keratitis
may appear in the form of central infiltration
of cornea with characteristic rich
vascularization from the periphery, all around
the limbus. It may be superficial or deep.
• Clinical course is usually self-limiting and
phlycten disappears in 8-10 days leaving no
trace. However, recurrences are very common.
Differential diagnosis
• Phlyctenular conjunctivitis needs to be
differentiated from the episcleritis, scleritis,
and conjunctival foreign body granuloma.
• Presence of one or more whitish raised
nodules on the bulbar conjunctiva near the
limbus, with hyperaemia usually of the
surrounding conjunctiva, in a child living in
bad hygienic conditions (most of the times)
are the diagnostic features of the phlyctenular
conjunctivitis.
Management
1. Local therapy.
i. Topical steroids .
ii. Antibiotic drops and ointment to take care of
the associated secondary infection.
iii. Atropine (1%) when cornea is involved.
2. Specific therapy. eradicate causative conditns
i. Tuberculous infection should be excluded.
ii. Septic focus tonsillitis, adenoiditis, or caries
teeth,
iii. Parasitic infestation should be ruled out.
CONTACT DERMOCONJUNCTIVITIS
• an allergic disorder, involving conjunctiva and
skin of lids along with surrounding face.
• Etiology
• It is a delayed hypersensitivity (type IV)
response to prolonged contact with chemicals
and drugs.
• common topical ophthalmic medications
which cdc are
• atropine, penicillin, neomycin, soframycin and
gentamycin..
• Clinical picture
• 1. Cutaneous involvement is in the form of
weeping eczematous reaction, involving all
areas with which medication comes in
contact.
• 2. Conjunctival response is in the form of
hyperaemia with a generalised papillary
response affecting the lower fornix and lower
palpebral conjunctiva more than the upper
• Diagnosis is made from: Typical clinical
picture. Conjunctival cytology shows a
lymphocytic response with masses of
eosinophils. Skin test to the causative allergen
is positive in most of the cases.
• Treatment consists of:
1. Discontinuation of the causative medication,
2. Topical steroid eye drops to relieve symptoms
3. Application of steroid ointment on the
involved skin.
Conj in blistering mucocutaneous
diseases• Mucous membrane pemphigoid
• S–J syndrome-TEN(Lyell syndrome)
• Atopic (and less commonly vernal) KC
• Conjunctival chemical and thermal burns
• Severe bacterial or viral conjunctivitis
• Trachom • Drug-induced
• OtherS: epidermolysis bullosa, pemph vulg,
linear IgA disease, dermatitis herpetiformis,
lichen planus, porphyria cutanea tarda, xerode
pigmentosum, scleroderma, xerophthalmia
Mucous membrane pemphigoid
• (MMP)/ cicatricial pemphigoid (CP): a chr
autoimmune mucocutaneous blistering
diseases charac by linear antibody and
complement deposition at epithelial BM
• involve the skin & mucous membranes of the
mouth, nasopharynx, upper airways, genitalia,
and gastrointestinal tract.
• Particular clinical forms :bullous pemphigoid
(BP) shows a predilection for skin, also affects
the mouth and other tissues. (OCP) involves
the conjunctiva and causes (cicatrization).
• The disease typically presents in old age and
affects females more than males 2 : 1 ratio
• Ocular features
• 1 Presentation is with the insidious onset
of non-specific conjunctivitis which is bilateral,
but frequently asymmetrical. Because of its
rarity, the diagnosis is often overlooked or
there may be misdiagnosis, with specific
treatment being delayed.
2 Conjunctiva • Papillary conjunctivitis,
diffuse hyperaemia and oedema, and necrosis
• Fine lines of subconjunctival fibrosis and
shortening of the inferior fornices .
• Flattening of the plica and keratinization
of the caruncle .
• Symblepharon (plural symblephara) is an
adhesion between the bulbar and palpebral
conjunctiva .
• Dry eye is caused by a combination of
destruction of goblet cells and accessory
lacrimal glands as well as occlusion of the
main lacrimal ductules. .
• The chronically progressive course of the
disease may be punctuated by exacerbations.
• Disease progression should be regularly
monitored by measuring the depth of the
fornices and noting the position of adhesion
• 3 Cornea • Epithelial defects associated
with drying and exposure
• Infiltration and peripheral vascularization
• Keratinization and ‘conjunctivalization’ of
the corneal surface following damage to the
limbus & conseq epithelial stem cell failure
• End-stage disease is characterized by
total symblepharon and corneal opacification (
• 4 Eyelids • Aberrant (dysplastic) lashes,
chronic blepharitis and keratinization of the lid
margin.
• Ankyloblepharon, in which there are
adhesions at the outer canthus between the
upper and lower lids.s
• Systemic features
• 1 Mucosal involvement is characterized by
subepidermal blisters, frequently oral . The
blisters rupture within a day or two leaving
erosions & ulcers that heal without significant
scarring. Ulcers in other sites typically heal
with scarring which result in stricture formatn.
Stricture of the oesophagus can result in
regurgitation and aspiration of food. Laryngeal
or tracheal stenosis may be life-threatening.
2 Skin lesions less common (25%) present
as tense blisters and erosions. involve head
and neck , the groins and extremities
Systemic treatment
• 1 Dapsone first-line treatment in patients
with mild–moderate disease, at1 mg/kg daily
increasing to 100 mg or 200 mg, if tolerated;
approximately 70% of patients respond. The
drug is contraindicated in G6PD deficiency.
2 Antimetabolites such as azathioprine,
methotrexate or mycophenolate mofetil are
alternatives for mild–moderate disease if
dapsone is contraindicated, ineffective or
poorly tolerated, and are suitable for long-
term therapy.
• 3 Steroids (oral prednisolone 1–1.5 mg/kg)
are effective for rapid disease control, but
adverse effects virtually preclude the long-
term use of higher doses.
4 Other measures • Intravenous
immunoglobulin therapy has shown promising
results in some patients unresponsive to other
agents.
• Ciclosporin has been used with apparent
benefit although data to support its effect are
limited.
• Local treatment
• 1 Topical • Artificial tears
• Steroids as adjunctive treatment.
• Retinoic acid may reduce keratinization.
• Antibiotics when indicated.
• Lid hygiene and low-dose oral
tetracycline for blepharitis.
2 Subconjunctival mitomycin-C and/or
steroid injection may be used if systemic
immunosuppression is not possible.
3 Contact lenses may be used with caution
to protect the cornea from aberrant lashes
and from dehydration.
• Reconstructive surgery under systemic steroid
cover, considered when active disease is
controlled.
• • Aberrant eye lashes can be treated by
laser ablation or cryotherapy; the latter may
be combined with lid splitting
• Severe dry eyes may be helped by
punctal occlusion if no punc scarring.
• Promotion of healing of persistent or
recu corneal epithelial defects by lat tarsorr
haphy or botulinum toxin-induced ptosis.
• • Entropion managed by a procedure (e.g.
retractor plication) that does not involve
conjunctival incision.
• Conjunctival keratinization may be
addressed by mucous membrane autografting
(e.g. oral) or amniotic membrane
transplantation; these techniques can also be
used for forniceal restoration.
• Limbal stem cell transfer may be
attempted for corneal epithelialization failure.
• Keratoplasty carries a high risk of failure
due to surface morbidity; lamellar grafts may
be effective for perforations.
• Keratoprostheses in end-stage disease.
Stevens–Johnson syndrom TEN
(Lyell syndrome)
• Definition :Previously, the terms ‘Stevens–
Johnson syndrome (SJS)’ and ‘erythema
multiforme major’ used synonymously.
However, i now erythema multiforme is a
distinct disease, milder and recurrent,
dissimilar c f and a tendency for diff ppitating
factors (erythema multiforme predominantly
infections, Stevens–Johnson predominantly
drugs).
• ‘Toxic epidermal necrolysis’ (TEN – Lyell
syndrome) is a severe variant of SJS.
Classically, SJS/TEN patients tend to be young
adults, though other age groups, including
children and the elderly, may be affected. An
SJS-type presentation is more common in
males than females, with the reverse probably
true for TEN
• Pathogenesis
• a cell-mediated delayed hypersensitivity
immune reaction , either directly to drugs or
to epithelial cell antigens modified by drug
exposure. drugs incriminated includE
antibiotics (esp sulfonamides and trimetho
prim), analgesics, cough and cold remedies,
cocaine, NSAIDS, anticonvulsants allopurinol.
• Micro-org incl Mycoplasma pneumoniae and
herpes simplex virus (HSV). Because symp
take 3 wks to develop after exp, in 50%
ppting cause cant be identified with certainty.
• 1 Presentation is with flu-like symptoms
which last up to 14 days before the app of
mucocutaneous lesions.
2 Acute signs • Haemorrhagic crusting
of lid margins that may become confluent.
• Papillary conjunctivitis, which can range
from mild, transient & self-limiting to severe.
• Conjunctival membranes & pseudo
membranes, severe hyperaemia, hrhages,
blisters and patchy infarction.
• Keratopathy : a spectrum fm punctate
erosions to larger epithelial defects, secondary
bacterial keratitis and occasi perforation.
• Late signs • Keratinization of the
conjunctiva and lid margi, sometimes with
abrasive plaque formation.
• Posterior lid margin disease with opening
of meibomian gland orifices onto the lid
surface .
• Forniceal shortening and symblepharon
formation.
• Eyelid complications include cicatricial
entropion and ectropion, trichiasis,
metaplastic lashes and ankyloblepharon.
• Keratopathy including scarring,
vascularization and keratinization as a result of
the primary inflammation and/or infection, as
well as cicatricial entropion and aberrant
lashes.
• Watery eyes due to fibrosis of the
lacrimal puncta. Dry eyes may also occur as a
result of fibrosis of lacrimal gland ductules and
conjunctival metaplasia with loss of goblet
cells.
• Systemic features
• 1 Mucosal involvement is characterized by
blistering and haemorrhagic crusting of the
lips . The blisters may also involve the tongue,
oropharynx, nasal mucosa and occasionally
the genitalia.
2 Skin • Small purpuric, vesicular or
necrotic lesions involving the extremities, face
and trunk . These are usually transient but
may be widespread. Healing usually occurs
within 1–4 weeks, leaving a pigmented scar.
• Widespread sloughing of the epidermis is
uncommon.
• 3 ‘Target’ lesions showing the classic three
zones are now viewed as characteristic of
erythema multiforme rather than SJS/TEN, but
the mucosal lesions appear similar in both
conditions
• Systemic treatment
• 1 Removal of the precipitant if possible,
such as discontinuation of drugs and
treatment of suspected infection.
2 General supportive measures such as
maintenance of adequate hydration,
electrolyte balance and nutrition (especially
protein replacement) are critical.
Management in a specialist burns unit should
reduce the chance of infection when the
extent of skin involvement is substantial.
• 3 Systemic steroids remain controversial.
There are reports of increased mortality in
older papers, but later research has raised the
possibility that early high-dose intravenous
treatment may improve outcomes.
4 Other immunosuppressants including
ciclosporin, azathioprine, cyclophosphamide
and intravenous immunoglobulin may be
considered in selected cases, but are
controversial and controlled trials are lacking.
5 Systemic antibiotics may be given as
prophylaxis against skin or other systemic
infection, avoiding those known to be at
higher risk of precipitating SJS/TEN
• Ocular treatment
• 1 Acute disease • Topical lubricants.
• Topical steroids may be used but their
efficacy has not been demonstrated
conclusively.
• Lysis of developing symblephara with a
sterile glass rod or damp cotton bud.
• A scleral ring, consisting of a large haptic
lens with the central zone removed, may help
to prevent symblepharon formation .
• Pseudomembrane/membrane peeling
can be considered
• Treatment of bacterial keratitis.
• 2 Chronic disease management addressing
complications. • Adequate lubrication,
including punctal occlusion if necessary.
• Topical transretinoic acid 0.01% or
0.025% may reverse keratinization.
• Treatment of aberrant lashes.
• Bandage contact lenses (typically gas
permeable scleral lenses ) to maintain surface
moisture, protect the cornea from aberrant
lashes, and address irregular astigmatism.
• Mucous membrane grafting (e.g. buccal
mucosa autograft) for forniceal
reconstruction.
• 3 Corneal rehabilitation may involve the
following: • Superficial keratectomy for
keratinization.
• In eyes with reasonable stem cell
function, lamellar corneal grafting may be
used for superficial scarring and is generally
preferred to penetrating keratoplasty.
• Amniotic membrane grafting.
• Limbal stem cell transplantation
(cadaveric or living relative).
• Keratoprosthesis implantation in end-
stage disease.
Superior limbic keratoconjunctivitis
• uncommon chr disease of the superior limbus
and the superior bulbar and tarsal conjunc.
• affects both eyes of middle-aged women,
approx 50% of whom have abnormal thyroid
function (usually hyperthyroidism); approx 3%
of patients with thyroid eye disease have SLK.
• symptoms are more severe than signs. course
over years although remission spontaneous.
• similarities to mech-induced papillary conj,
contact lens wear and following upper lid
surgery or trauma.
Diagnosis
1 Presentation : non-specific symptoms often
intermittent: FB sensation, burning, mild
photophobia, mucoid disch & freq blinking.
2 Conjunctiva Papillary hypertrophy of the
superior tarsus, often a diffuse velvety app.
• Hyperaemia of a radial band of the sup
bulbar conjunctiva & limbal pap hypertrophy .
• Light downward pressure on the upper
lid results in a fold of redundant conjunctiva
crossing the upper limbus .
• Petechial haemorrhages may be present.
• 3 Cornea • Superior punctate corneal
epithelial erosions are common and are often
separated from the limbus by a zone of
normal epithelium.
• Superior filamentary keratitis develops in
about one-third of cases.
• Mild superior pannus resembling arcus
senilis may develop in long-standing disease.
4 Keratoconjunctivitis sicca is present in
only about 50% of cases.
5 Thyroid function testing should be
performed if the patient is not already known
to have thyroid dysfunction.
Treatment
1 Topical a Lubricants to reduce friction b/n
the tarsal & bulbar conjunctiva
b Acetylcysteine 5% or 10% q.i.d. to break
down filaments and provide lubrication.
c Mast cell stabilizers antiinflammatory ;
steroids : best used in short intensive courses
with rapid tapering, esp severe cases.
d Ciclosporin 0.05% b.d. as prim or adjunctive
therapy, esp in keratoconjunctivitis sicca
e Retinoic acid to retard keratinization
f Auto serum 20% drops; up to 10 times/ day
2 Soft contact lenses between the lid and the
superior conjunctiva, are effective in some
cases. , a unilat lens may provide bilatl relief.
3 Supratarsal steroid injection. 0.1 mL of
triamcinolone 40 mg/mL antiinflammatory.
4 Temporary superior and/or inferior
punctal occlusion using a plug.
5 Resection of sup limbal conj, in a zone
2 mm from the sup limbus or of area staining
with rose bengal, in resistant disease. Lax conj
removed, with regrowth firmly anchored.
6 Conjunctival ablation by Ag NO3 0.5% or
thermocautery to the affected area.
7 Treatment of assoc thyroid dysfunction.
Ligneous conjunctivitis
• a very rare disorder charac by recurrent, often
bilat fibrin-rich pseudomembranous lesions of
wood-like consistency that develop on the
tarsal conj.
• It is a systemic condition which may involve
the periodontal tissue, the upper and lower
respiratory tract, kidneys, middle ear and
female genitalia. It can be sight-threatening,
and death can occasionally occur from
pulmonary involvement.
Diagnosis
1 Presentation is with nonspecific conjunc,
usually in childhood (median age 5 years),
although onset may be at any age. .
2 Signs • Red-white lobular conjunctival
masses .
• The lesions may be covered by a yellow-
white thick mucoid discharge .
• Corneal scarring, vascularization,
infection or melting in advanced disease.
Treatment
Treatment: unsatisfactory & spont resolutn
rare. discontinue any antifibrinolytic
drugs. 1 Surgical removal with diathermy
of the base of the lesion. Pre-op topical
plasminogen may soften pseudomembranes
and facilitate removal.
2 Topical • Foll membrane removal,
hrly heparin and steroids are given until the
wound has re-epithelialized, with tapering
over weeks until signs of inflamm disappear.
• Recurrence may be retarded by long-
term ciclosporin and steroid instillation.
• 3 Other modalities • Intravenous or
topical plasminogen.
• Amniotic membrane transplantation to
the conjunctiva following lesion removal.
GRANULOMATOUS
CONJUNCTIVITIS
• specific chronic inflammations of the
conjunctiva, characterised by proliferative
lesions which r localized to one eye and
associated with regional lymphadenitis
• Tuberculosis of conjunctiva
• Sarcoidosis of conjunctiva
• Syphilitic conjunctivitis
• Leprotic conjunctivitis
• Conjunctivitis in tularaemia
• Ophthalmia nodosa
• Parinaud's oculoglandular syndrome : group
of conditions characterised by:
1. Unilateral granulomatous conjunctivitis
(nodular elevations surrounded by follicles),
2. Preauricular lymphadenopathy, and
3. Fever.
• Its common causes are tularaemia, cat-
scratch disease, tuberculosis, syphilis and
lymphogranuloma venereum
• Ophthalmia nodosa (Caterpillar hair
conjunctivitis) a granulomatous inflammation
of the conjunctiva characterized by formation
of a nodule on the bulbar conjunctiva in
response to irritation caused by the retained
hair of caterpillar.
• The disease is, therefore common in summers.
may be often mistaken for a tubercular
nodule.
• Histopathological examination reveals hair
surrounded by giant cells and lymphocytes.
• Treatment consists of excision biopsy of the
nodule.
Factitious conjunctivitis
• Self-injury often intentional: inadvertently in
mucous fishing syndrome & contact lens
removal .
• Damage may be the result of either
mechanical abrasion or perforation, or of the
instillation of irritant but readily accessible
household substances, such as soap.
• Occasionally over-instillation of prescribed
ocular medication is responsible.
Diagnosis
• Inferior conjunct injection & staining with
rose bengal , with a quiet sup bulbar conjunc.
• Linear K abrasions, persistent epithelial
defects & occasionally focal K perforation.
• Secondary infection with Candida spp.
• Sterile ring infiltrate and hypopyon.
• Corneal scarring.
• The patient may have sought multiple
medical opinions over an extended perioD
• symptoms disproportionate to signs.
Management
• Exclude other diagnoses.
• Close observation may be required
• Confrontation often leads to failure to return
for review.
• A psychiatric opinion may be appropriate.
Degenerations : Pingueculum
• A pingueculum : common, innocuous, bilat
and asymptomatic ‘elastotic’ degeneration of
collagen fibres of conjunctival stroma.
• The cause is : actinic damage, similar to the
aetiology of pterygium .
• 1 Signs. A yellow-white mound or aggregn of
smaller mounds on bulbar conjunc adjacent
to the limbus. more frequently located at the
nasal than the temporal limbus , although is
frequently present at both. Calcification is
occasionally visible.
• 2 Treatment is usually unnecessary because
growth is very slow or absent. Occasionally,
however, a pingueculum may become acutely
inflamed (pingueculitis) and require a short
course of a weak steroid such as
fluorometholone. Excision is occasionally
performed for cosmetic reasons or if a large
lesion is causing significant irritation
Pterygium
• A pterygium is a triangular fibrovascular
subepithelial ingrowth of degen bulbar conj
tissue over the limbus onto the cornea.
• It typically develops in patients who living in
hot climates and, as with pinguecula, may
represent a response to ultraviolet exposure
and possibly to other factors such as chronic
surface dryness.
• A pterygium is histo similar to a pingueculum
and shows elastotic degenerative changes in
vascularized subepithelial stromal collagen
Types
• . Depending upon the progression it may be
progressive or regressive pterygium.
• Progressive pterygium is thick, fleshy and
vascular with a few infiltrates in the cornea, in
front of the head of the pterygium (called cap
of pterygium).
• Regressive pterygium is thin, atrophic,
attenuated with very little vascularity. There is
no cap. Ultimately it becomes membranous
but never disappears.
Clinical features
• Symptoms • asymptomatic.
• Irritation & grittiness caused by dellen effect
advancing edge d/t interference with tear film.
• Pts using contact lenses develop symptoms
of irritation at an earlier stage due to edge lift.
• Interference with vision by obscuring the
visual axis or inducing astigmatism.
• Intermittent inflam similar to pingueculitis
• Cosmesis may be a significant problem
• If pseudopterygium is suspected, there may
be a history of a causative episode
• Signs. A pterygium is made of 3 parts: a ‘cap’
(an avascular halo-like zone at the advancing
edge), a head, and a body. a Type 1
extends less than 2 mm onto the cornea . A
deposit of iron (Stocker line) may be seen in
the corneal epithelium anterior to the
advancing head of the pterygium.
b Type 2 involves up to 4 mm of the cornea &
may be primary or recurrent following surgery
c Type 3 encroaches onto more than 4 mm of
the cornea and involves the visual axis
CAP
HEAD
BODY
• d Pseudopterygium is caused by a band of
conjunctiva adhering to an area of
compromised cornea at its apex. It forms as a
response to an acute inflammatory episode
such as a chemical burn , corneal ulcer
(especially if marginal), trauma and cicatrizing
conjunctivitis
Treatment
• 1 Medical treatment of symptomatic patients
involves tear substitutes, & topical steroids for
inflammation. The patient may be advised to
wear sunglasses to reduce ultraviolet
exposure decrease the growth stimulus.
• 2 Surgical technique. Simple excision (‘bare
sclera’ technique) is associated with a high
rate of recurrence (around 80%) that may be
more aggressive than the initial lesion. .
• Simple conjunctival flap
• Conjunctival autografting, currently the most
popular approach. The donor conjunctival
patch is usually harvested from the superior
paralimbal region – the site usually heals well.
• Adjunctive treatment with mitomycin C or
beta-irradiation; may rarely be complicated by
late scleral necrosis.
• Amniotic membrane patch grafting (
reserved for aggressive lesns or recurrences).
• Occasionally peripheral lamellar keratoplasty
is required for deep lesions
Concretions
• v common & usually assoc with aging,though
they can also form in patients with chronic
conjun inflam such as trachoma
• 1 Signs • Multiple tiny cysts containing
yellowish-white deposits of epithelial debris
including keratin, usually located
subepithelially in the inferior tarsal and
forniceal conjunctiva .
• Can become calcified and, particularly if
large, may erode the overlying epithelium and
cause irritation.
• 2 Treatment of symptomatic concretions
involves removal at the slit-lamp with a needle
under topical anaesthesia.
Tumours
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Conjunctivitis

  • 2.  CONJUNCTIVITIS : Conjunctival Hyperemia + DISCHARGE ( Watery, Mucoid, Mucopurulent, Purulent) CLINICAL SIGNS • CONGESTION • CHEMOSIS • SUBCONJUNCTIVAL HEMORRHAGES • DISCHARGE • MEMBRANE • PAPILLAE • FOLLICLES • PSEUDOMEMBRANE • PANNUS • PRE AURICULAR LYMPH NODES
  • 12. CLASSIFICATION ETIOLOGICAL CLINICAL • INFECTIVE • ALLERGIC • IRRITATIVE • KERATOCONJUNCTIVITIS • WITH SKIN & MUCOUS MEMB DISORDERS •UNKNOWN ETIOLOGY • TRAUMATIC • ACUTE CATARRHAL/MUCOPURULENT • ACUTE PURULENT • SEROUS • CHRONIC SINGLE • ANGULAR • MEMBRANOUS • PSEUDOMEMBRANOUS • PAPILLARY • FOLLICULAR • OPTHALMIA NEONATORUM • GRANULAMATOUS • ULCERATIVE • CICATRISING
  • 13. NATURAL PROTECTIVE MECHANISMS IN THE CONJUCTIVA  LOW TEMPERATURE - EXPOSURE TO AIR  PHYSICAL PROTECTION BY LIDS  FLUSHING ACTION OF TEARS  ANTIBACTERIAL ACTIVITY OF LYSOZYMES  HUMORAL PROTECTION BY THE TEAR IMMUNOGLOBULINS
  • 14. INFECTIVE CONJUNCTIVITIS  INFLAMMATION OF THE CONJUNCTIVA CAUSED BY MICRO-ORGANISMS IS THE COMMONEST VARIETY. TYPES BACTERIAL SPIROCHAETAL CHLAMYDIAL PROTOZOAL VIRAL PARASITIC FUNGAL OTHERS RICKETTISIAE
  • 15. BACTERIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS SPORADIC EPIDEMIC (MONSOON) • Staph. aureus • Staph. Epidermidis • Diphtheroids • Corynebacterium xerosis • Propioniobacterium acnes NORMAL (NON-PATHOGENIC COMMENSALS ORGANISMS THAT INVADE INTACT CORNEA • Neisseria Gonorrhoea • Corynebacterium Diphtheriae
  • 16. ETIOLOGY  PREDISPOSING FACTORS  CAUSATIVE ORGANISMS  MODE OF INFECTION
  • 17. ETIOLOGY • Predisposing factors for bacterial conjunctivitis, especially epidemic forms, are flies, poor hygienic conditions, hot dry climate, poor sanitation and dirty habits. These factors help the infection to establish, as the disease is highly contagious • Mode of infection. Conjunctiva may get infected from three sources, viz, exogenous, local surro1. Exogenous infections may spread: (i) directly through close contact, as air-borne infections or as water-borne infections
  • 18. (ii) through vector transmission (e.g., flies); (iii) through material transfer EG infected fingers of doctors, nurses, common towels, handkerchiefs, and infected tonometers. • 2. Local spread from neighbouring structures like infected lacrimal sac, lids, and naso pharynx. Also a change in the character of relatively innocuous organisms present in the conjunctival sac itself may cause infections. • 3. Endogenous infections may occur very rarely through blood e.g., gonococcal and meningococcal infections
  • 19. CAUSATIVE ORGANISMS STAPH AUREUS BACRTERIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS BLEPHARO CONJUNCTIVITIS STAPH EPIDERMIDIS (INNOCUOUS FLORA) BLEPHARO CONJUNCTIVITIS STREPTOCOCCUS PNEUMONIAE (PNEUMOCOCCUS) PETECHIAL SUBCONJUNCTIVIAL HEMORRHAGES STREPTOCOCCUS PYOGENES (HEMOLYTICUS) VIRULENT PSEUDOMEMBRANOUS CONJUNCTIVITIS HEMOPHILUS INFLUENZA (aegypticus koch –weeks bacillus MUCUPURULENT CONJUNCTIVITIS (RED EYE) MORAXELLA LACUNATE (Morax- Axenfeld bacillus) Angular conjunctivitis Angular BLEPHARO CONJUNCTIVITIS PSEUDOMANAS PYOCYANEA (Virulent) Invades Cornea NEISSIERIA GONORRHOEA ACUTE PURULENT CONJUNCTIVITIS OPHTHALMIA NEONATORUM NEISSIERIA MENINGIDIS MUCUPURULENT CONJUNCTIVITIS CORYNEBACTERIUM DIPHTHERIAE MEMBRANOUS CONJUNCTIVITIS
  • 20. PATHOLOGY Severity depends on - degree of inflammation - causative organisms 1. VASCULAR RESPONSE 2. CELLULAR RESPONSE 3. CONJUNCTIVAL TISSUE RESPONSE 4. CONJUCTIVAL DISCHARGE
  • 21. VASCULAR RESPONSE • CONGESTION • ↑ PERMEABILITY OF CONJUNCTIVAL VESSELS • CAPILLARY PROLIFERATION CONJUNCTIVAL TISSUE RESPONSE • EDEMA • EPITHELIUM • SUPERFICIAL CELLS : Degenerate become loose desquamate. • Basal Cells : Proliferate • ↑ Goblet Cells CELLULAR RESPONSE Exudation of PMNs & Inflammatory cells into substantia propria & conjunctivial SAC. CONJUNCTIVAL DISCHAGE MILD SEVERE TEARS MUCUS INF. CELLS DESQ. EPI. CELLS FIBRIN BACTERIA DIAPEDISIS OF RBC’S + ↓ BLOOD STAINED P A T H O L O G Y
  • 22. CLINICAL TYPES OF BACTERIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS: • ACUTE MUCOPURULENT CONJUNCTIVITIS IS the most common type of acute bacterial conjunctivitis. characterised by marked conjunctival hyperaemia and mucopurulent discharge . • Common causative bacteria are: Staphylococcus aureus, Koch-Weeks bacillus, Pneumococcus andStreptococcus. Mucopurulent conjunctivitis accompanies exanthemata such as measlesand scarlet fever.
  • 23. Clinical picture Symptoms • Discomfort & f b sensation d/t engorgemt of vessels. • Mild photophobia, • Mucopurulent discharge from the eyes. • Sticking together of lid margins during sleep. • Slight blurring of vision due to mucous flakes infront of cornea. • Sometimes coloured halos due to prismatic effect of mucus present on cornea.
  • 24. Signs • Conjunctival congestion, more marked in palpebral conjunctiva, fornices and peripheral bulbar conjunctiva, ‘fiery red eye’. The congestn is less marked in circumcorneal zone. • Chemosis i.e., swelling of conjunctiva. • Petechial haemorrhages are seen when the causative organism is pneumococcus. • Flakes of mucopus are seen in the fornices, canthi and lid margins. • Cilia are usually matted together with yellow crust
  • 25.
  • 26. • Clinical course. Mucopurulent conjunctivitis reaches its height in three to four days. If untreated, in mild cases the infection may be overcome and the condition is cured in 10-15 days; or it may pass to less intense form, the ‘chronic catarrhal conjunctivitis’. • Complications. Occasionally • complicated by marginal corneal ulcer, superficial keratitis, blepharitis or dacryocystitis.
  • 27. • Differential diagnosis • 1. From other causes of acute red eye . • 2. From other types of conjunctivitis. It is made out from the typical clinical picture of disease and is confirmed by conjunctival cytology and bacteriological examination of secretions and scrapings .
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 30. Treatment • 1. Topical antibiotics. Ideally, the antibiotic should be selected after culture and sensitivity tests. However, in routine, most of the patients respond well to broad specturm antibiotics. . newer antibiotic drops such as ciprofloxacin (0.3%), ofloxacin (0.3%) or gatifloxacin (0.3%) may be used.
  • 31. • Dark goggles may be used to prevent photophobia. • No bandage should be applied in patients with mucopurulent conjunctivitis • Anti-inflammatory and analgesic drugs (e.g. ibuprofen and paracetamol) may be given in sensitive patients.
  • 32. ACUTE PURULENT CONJUNCTIVITIS • Acute purulent conjunctivitis also known as acute blenorrhea or hyperacute conjunctivitis is characterised by a violent inflammatory response. It occurs in two forms: (1) Adult purulent conjunctivitis (2) Ophthalmia neonatorum in newborn
  • 33. • Etiology • affects adults, predominantly males. • Commonest causative organism is Gonococcus; but rarely it may be Staphylococcus aureus or Pneumococcus. Gonococcal infection directly spreads from genitals to eye.
  • 34. Clinical picture • three stages: 1. Stage of infiltraton. It lasts for 4-5 days and is • characterised by painful and tender eyeball. • Bright red velvety chemosed conjunctiva. • Lids are tense and swollen. • Discharge is watery or sanguinous. • Pre-auricular lymph nodes are enlarged.
  • 35.
  • 36. • 2. Stage of blenorrhoea. It starts at about fifth day, lasts for several days and is characterised by: • Frankly purulent, copious, thick discharge trickling down the cheeks . • Other symptoms are increased but tension in the lids is decreased
  • 37.
  • 38. • 3. Stage of slow healing. in this stage, pain is decreased & swelling of the lids subsides. • Conjunctiva remains red, thickened & velvety. • Discharge diminishes slowly & in the end resolution is complete. • Associations. Gonococcal conjunctivitis is usually associated with urethritis and arthritis.
  • 39. Complications • 1. Corneal involvement frequent as the gono can invade an intact k epithelium. It may occur in the form of diffuse haze and oedema, central necrosis, corneal ulceration or even perforation. • 2. Iridocyclitis may also occur. • 3. Systemic complications, though rare, include gonorrhoea arthritis, endocarditis and septicaemia.
  • 40.
  • 41. INVESTIGATIONS • Only in severe cases • Conj scraping: gram’s stain • Culture in chocalate agar or thayer martin media • PCR for resistant infns.
  • 42. Treatment 1. Systemic therapy : more critical than topical for N.gonorrhoeae and N. meningitidis. • penicillin & tetracyline are no longer adequate as first-line treatment. • Norflox, Cefoxitim 1.0 gm or cefotaxime 500 mg. IV qi dor ceftriaxone 1.0 gm IM qid, all for 5 days; or Spectinomycin 2.0 gm IM for 3 days. All of the above regimes be followed by a 1 week course of either doxycycline 100 mg bid or erythromycin 250-500 mg orally qid.
  • 43. 2. Topical antibiotic therapy includes ofloxacin, ciprofloxacin or tobramycin eye drops or bacitracin or erythromycin eye ointment every 2 hours for the first 2-3 days and then 5 times daily for 7 days. 3. Irrigation of the eyes frequently with sterile saline : washing away infected debris. 4. Other general measures are similar to acute mucopurulent conjunctivitis. 5. Topical atropine 1 per cent eye drops should be instilled OD or BD if cornea is involved. 6. Patient and the sexual partner should be referred for evaluation of other STD.
  • 44. AC. MEMBRANOUS CONJUNCTIVITIS • an acute inflammation of the conjunctiva, charac by formation of a true membrane on the conjunctiva. • Now VERY RARE, because of markedly decreased incidence of diphtheria. • Etiology : The disease is typically caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae and occasionally by virulent type of Streptococcus haemolyticus
  • 45. Pathology • Corynebacterium diphtheriae produces a violent inflammation of the conjunctiva, associated with deposn of fibrinous exudate on the surface as well as in the substance of the conjunctiva resulting in formation of a membrane. Usually in the palpebral conjunctiva. • There is associated coagulative necrosis, resulting in sloughing of membrane. Ultimately healing takes place by granulation tissue.
  • 46. Clinical features • usually affects children between 2-8 years of age who are not immunised against diphth. may have a mild or very severe course. The child is toxic and febrile. • three stages: 1. Stage of infiltration is characterised by: • Scanty conjunctival discharge and severe pain in the eye. • Lids are swollen and hard.
  • 47. • Conjunctiva is red, swollen and covered with a thick grey-yellow membrane which is tough & firmly adherent to the conj, which on removing bleeds and leaves behind a raw area. Pre-auricular lymph nodes are enlarged. • 2. Stage of suppuration. In this stage, pain decreases and the lids become soft. The membrane is sloughed off leaving a raw surface. There is copious outpouring of purulent discharge.
  • 48. 3. Stage of cicatrisation. In this stage, the raw surface covered with granulation tissue is epithelised. Healing occurs by cicatrisation, which may cause trichiasis and conjunctival xerosis
  • 49. • Complications1. Corneal ulceration is a frequent complication in acute stage. The bacteria may even involve the intact corneal epithelium. • 2. Delayed complications due to cicatrization include symblepharon, trichiasis, entropion and conjunctival xerosis. • Diagnosis • Diagnosis is made from typical clinical features and confirmed by bacteriological examination.
  • 50. Treatment A. Topical therapy • 1. Penicillin eye drops (1:10000 units per ml) should be instilled every half hourly. • 2. Antidiphtheric serum (ADS) should be instilled every one hour. • 3. Atropine sulfate 1 percent ointment should be added if cornea is ulcerated. • 4. Broad spectrum antibiotic ointment should be applied at bed time.
  • 51. • B. Systemic therapy • 1. Crystalline penicillin 5 lac units should be injected intramuscularly BD for 10 days. • 2. (ADS) (50 thousand units) im stat. • C. Prevention of symblepharon Once the membrane is sloughed off, sym blepharon which be prevented by applying contact shell or sweeping the fornices with a glass rod smeared with ointment. • Prophylaxis • 1. Isolation of patient • 2. Proper immunization against diphtheria
  • 52. PSEUDOMEMBRANOUS CONJ • It is a type of acute conjunctivitis, charac by formation of a pseudomembrane (which can be easily peeled off leaving behind intact conjunctival epithelium) on the conjunctiva. • Etiology • 1. Bacterial infection. Commonly Coryne bacterium diphtheriae of low virulence, staphylococci, streptococci, H. influenzae and N. gonorrhoea..
  • 53. • 2. Viral infections such as herpes simplex and adenoviral epidemic keratoconjunctivitis may be associated with pseudomembrane formn. • 3. Chemical irritants such as acids, ammonia, lime, silver nitrate and copper sulfate are also known to cause formation of such membrane • Pathology inflammation of conjunctiva associated with pouring of fibrinous exudate on its surface which coagulates and leads to formation of a pseudomembrane.
  • 54. • Clinical picture • Pseudomembranous conjunctivitis is charac by Acute m p conjunctivitis, like features assoc with Pseudomembrane formation which is thin yellowish-white membrane seen in the fornices and on the palpebral conjunctiva . • Pseudomembrane can be peeled off easily and does not bleed. • Treatment similar to m p conjunctivitis
  • 55. CHRONIC CATARRHAL CONJUNCTIVITIS • also known as ‘simple chronic conjunctivitis’ is charac by mild catarrhal inflamm of the conj. • Etiology A. Predisposing factors 1. Chr exposure to dust, smoke, & chem irritants. 2. Local cause of irritation such as trichiasis, concretions, f b & seborrhoeic scales. 3. Eye strain d/t ref errors, phorias or conv insuff. 4. Abuse of alcohol, insomnia and metabolic disorders
  • 56. • B. Causative organisms • Staphylococcus aureus : commonest cause . • Gram negative rods such as Proteus mirabilis, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli and Moraxella lacunata are other rare causes • C. Source and mode of infection. • 1. As continuation of acute mp conjunctivitis when untreated or partially treated. • 2. As chr infection fm chr dacryocystitis , chr rhinitis or chronic upper respiratory catarrh. • 3. As mild exogen infectn which results fm dir contact, air-borne or material transfer of infn
  • 57. Clinical picture • Symptoms of simple chronic conjunctivitis inc: • Burning and grittiness in the eyes, especially in the evening. • Mild chronic redness in the eyes. • Feeling of heat & dryness on the lid margins. • Difficulty in keeping the eyes open. • Mild mucoid discharge esp in the canthi. • Off and on lacrimation. • Feeling of sleepiness and tiredness in the eyes
  • 58. Signs. Grossly the eyes look normal but careful examination may reveal following signs: • Congestion of posterior conjunctival vessels. • Mild papillary hypertrophy of the palpebral conjunctiva. • Surface of the conjunctiva looks sticky. • Lid margins may be congested.
  • 59. Treatment 1. Predisposing factors when associated should be treated and eliminated. 2. Topical antibiotics such as chloramphenicol or gentamycin should be instilled 3-4 times a day for about 2 weeks to eliminate the mild chronic infection. 3. Astringent eye drops such as zinc-boric acid drops provide symptomatic relief.
  • 60. ANGULAR CONJUNCTIVITIS • a type of chr conjunctivitis charac by mild inflammation confined to the conj & lid margins near the angles associated with maceration of the surrounding skin. • Etiology 1. Predisp factors same as for 'simp chr conj. • 2. Causative organisms. Moraxella Axenfeld is commonest causative organism. so the disease is also called 'diplobacillary conjunc'. Rarely, staph may also cause angular conj.
  • 61. • 3. Source of infection is usually nasal cavity. • 4. Mode of infection. transmitted fm nasal cavity to the eyes by contam fingers or hanky. • Pathology The MA bacillus prod a proteolytic enzyme which acts by macerating the epithelium. This enzyme collects at the angles by the action of tears & thus macerates the epithelium of the conjunctiva, lid margin & the skin the surr angles of eye. The maceration is foll by vascular and cellular responses in the form of mild grade chronic inflammation. Skin may show eczematous changes.
  • 62. Clinical picture • Symptoms • Irritation, smarting sensation and feeling of discomfort in the eyes. • History of collection of dirty-white foamy discharge at the angles. • Redness in the angles of eyes.
  • 63. • Signs include: • Hyperaemia of bulbar conjunctiva near the canthi. • Hyperaemia of lid margins near the angles. • Excoriation of the skin around the angles. • Presence of foamy mucopurulent discharge at the angles.
  • 64. • Complications : blepharitis and shallow marginal catarrhal corneal ulceration • Treatment A. Prophylaxis includes treatment of associated nasal infection and good personal hygiene. B. Curative treatment consists of : • 1. Oxytetracycline (1%) eye ointment 2-3 times a day for 9-14 days will eradicate the infection. • 2. Zinc lotion instilled in day time and zinc oxide ointment at bed time inhibits the proteolytic ferment and thus helps in reducing the maceration.
  • 65. CHLAMYDIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS • Chlamydia :Like viruses are obligate intra cellular and filterable, whereas like bacteria contain both DNA and RNA, divide by binary fission & r sensitive to antibiotics. PLT group • Life cycle of the chlamydia. The infective particle invades the cytoplasm of epithelial cells, where it swells up and forms the 'initial body'. They rapidly divide into 'elementary bodies‘ embedded in glycogen matrix which are liberated when the cells burst. Then the 'elementary bodies' infect other cells where the whole cycle is repeated
  • 66.
  • 67. • Jones' classification. three classes : Class 1 : Blinding trachoma. refers to hyper endemic trachoma caused by serotypes A, B, Ba and C of Chlamydia trachomatis associated with secondary bacterial infection.transmitted from eye to eye by transfer of ocular discharge • Class 2 : Non-blinding trachoma. Chlamydia trachomatis serotypes A, B, Ba, and C; but is usually not associated with secondary bacterial infections. It occurs in mesoendemic or hypoendemic areas with better socio economic conditions. is a mild form of disease with ltd transmission d/t improved hygiene.
  • 68. Class 3: Paratrachoma. oculogenital chlamydial disease caused by serotypes D to K of chlamydia trachomatis. • It spreads from genitals to eye and mostly seen in urban population. It manifests as either adult inclusion conjunctivitis or ophthalmia neonatorum
  • 69. TRACHOMA • Trachoma (previously known as Egyptian ophthalmia) is a chronic keratoconjunctivitis, affecting the superficial epithelium of conj and cornea simultaneously. • It is charac by a mixed follicular and papillary response. • leading causes of preventable blindness . • 'trachoma' :Greek word for 'rough' which describes the surface appearance of the conjunctiva in chronic trachoma
  • 70. Etiology • A. Causative organism. Bedsonian organism, the Chlamydia trachomatis belonging to the (PLT) group. The organism is epitheliotropic and produces intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies called H.P. bodies (Halberstaedter Prowazeke bodies). Presently, 11 serotypes of chlamydia, (A, B, Ba, C, D, E, F, G, H, J and K) have been identified using microimmuno fluorescence techniques. • Serotypes A, B, Ba and C are associated with hyperendemic (blinding) trachoma, while D-K are associated with paratrachoma .
  • 71. B. Predisposing factors. • 1. Age. infancy & early childhood. • 2. Sex. in females ( in number & in severity) • 3. Race. very common in Jews and less common among Negroes. • 4. Climate. dry and dusty weather. • 5. Socioeconomic status. in poor classes owing to unhygienic , overcrowded,unsanitary conditions, fly population, paucity of water, lack of sep towels & handkys, & lack of education abt spread of contagious diseases. • 6. Env fact like dust, smoke, irritants , sunlight
  • 72. • C. Source of infection. In endemic zones the main source of infection is conj discharge of affected person. Therefore, superimposed bacterial infections help in transmission by increasing the conjunctival secretions. • D. Modes of infection.: 1. Direct spread of infection through contact by air-borne or water-borne modes. 2. Vector transmission is common thru flies. 3. Material transfer occurs thru contaminated fingers of doctors, nurses & contam tono meters. Other sources are use of common towel, handkerchief, bedding and surma-rods.
  • 73. Clinical profile of trachoma • Incubation period of trachoma varies from 5- 21 days. Onset is insidious (subacute),rarely it may present in acute form. • Clinical course of trachoma is determined by the presence or absence of secondary infection. In absence of infn , pure trachoma is mild and symptomless. But, mostly the picture is complicated by secondary infection. In early stages it is clinically indistinguishable from bacterial conjunctivitis & term 'trachomadubium' is used for this stage.
  • 74. • Natural history. In an endemic area natural history of trachoma is characterized by the development of acute disease in the first decade of life which continues with slow progression, until the disease becomes inactive in the second decade of life. • The sequelae occur at least after 20 years of the disease. • Thus, the peak incidence of blinding sequelae is seen in the fourth and fifth decade of life
  • 75. Symptoms • In the absence of secondary infection, symptoms are minimal and include mild foreign body sensation in the eyes, occasional lacrimation, slight stickiness of the lids and scanty mucoid discharge. • In the presence of secondary infection, typical symptoms of acute mucopurulent conjunctivitis develop.
  • 76. Signs
  • 77. SIGNS • A. Conjunctival signs 1. Congestion of upper tarsal & forniceaL conJ. 2. Conjunctival follicles. commonly seen on upper tarsal conjunctiva and fornix; but may also be present in the lower fornix, plica semilunaris and caruncle. Sometimes, (follicles may be seen on the bulbar conjunctiva (pathognomic of trachoma).
  • 78. • Structure of follicle. Follicles are aggregation of lymphocytes & other cells in the adenoid layer. Central part of each follicle is made up of mononuclear histiocytes, few lymphocytes and large multinucleated cells called Leber cells. The cortical part is made up of a zone of lymphocytes showing active proliferation. Blood vessels are present in the most peripheral part. In later stages signs of necrosis are also seen. Presence of Leber cells and signs of necrosis differentiate trachoma follicles from follicles of other forms of follicular conjunctivitis.
  • 80. • 3. Papillary hyperplasia. Papillae are reddish, flat topped raised areas which give red and velvety appearance to the tarsal conjunctiva . • Each papilla consists of central core of numerous dilated blood vessels surrounded by lymphocytes and covered by hypertrophic epithelium.
  • 82. • Conjunctival scarring which may be irregular, star-shaped or linear. Linear scar present in the sulcus subtarsalis is called Arlt's line. • 5. Concretions may be formed due to accumulation of dead epithelial cells and inspissated mucus in the depressions called glands of Henle.
  • 83. B. Corneal signs • 1. Superficial keratitis may be present in the upper part. • 2. Herbert follicles refer to typical follicles present in the limbal area. These are histologically similar to conjunctival follicles.
  • 84. • 3. Pannus i.e., infiltration of the cornea associated with vascularization is seen in upper part . The vessels are superficial and lie between epithelium and Bowman's membrane. Later on Bowman's membrane is also destroyed. Pannus may be progressive or regressive. • In progressive pannus, infiltration of cornea is ahead of vascularization. • In regressive pannus (pannus siccus) vessels extend a short distance beyond the area of infiltration.
  • 85.
  • 86. • 4. Corneal ulcer may sometime develop at the advancing edge of pannus. Such ulcers are usually shallow which may become chronic and indolent. • 5. Herbert pits are the oval or circular pitted scars, left after healing of Herbert follicles, the limbal area . • 6. Corneal opacity may be present in the upper part. It may even extend down and involve the pupillary area. It is the end result of trachomatous corneal lesions.
  • 87.
  • 88. 1 Active trachoma is most common in pre- school children and is charac BY Mixed follicular/papillary conjunctivitis + muco purulent discharge. In children under 2 years the papillary component may predominate. Superior epithelial keratitis and pannus formation . 2 Cicatricial trachoma is most prevalent in middle age.
  • 89. Grading of trachoma • McCallan's classification 1908 • Stage I (Incipient trachoma or stage of infiltration). characterized by hyperaemia of palpebral conjunctiva and immature follicles. • Stage II (Established trachoma or stage of florid infiltration). characterized by appearance of mature follicles, papillae and progressive corneal pannus
  • 90. • Stage III (Cicatrising trachoma or stage of scarring). obvious scarring of palpebral conj. • Stage IV (healed trachoma or stage of sequelae). disease is cured but sequelae due to cicatrisation give rise to symptoms. • WHO classification 1987 (FISTO): • 1. TF: Trach inflam-follicular. : stage of active trachoma with follicular inflammation. at least 5 or more follicles ( 0.5 mm or more in dia) must be present on the utc. Further, the deep tarsal vessels should be visible through the follicles and papillae.
  • 91. • 2. TI : Trachomatous inflammation intense. This stage has pronounced inflammatory thickening of the upper tarsal conjunctiva obscures more than half of the normal deep tarsal vessels. • 3. TS: Trachomatous scarring. This stage is diagnosed by the presence of scarring in the tarsal conjunctiva. These scars are easily visible as white, bands or sheets (fibrosis) in the tarsal conjunctiva • 4. TT Trachomatous trichiasis.: labelled when at least 1 eyelash rubs the eyeball. recent removal of inturned eyelashes also graded as
  • 92. • 5. CO: Corneal opacity. This stage is labelled when easily visible corneal opacity is present over the pupil. This sign refers to corneal scarring that is so dense that at least part of pupil margin is blurred when seen through the opacity. • The definition is intended to detect corneal opacities that cause significant visual impairment (less than 6/18).
  • 93. Sequelae of trachoma 1. Sequelae in the lids may be trichiasis entropion, tylosis (thickening of lid margin), ptosis, madarosis and ankyloblepharon. 2. Conjunctival sequelae include concretions, pseudocyst, xerosis and symblepharon. 3. Corneal sequelae may be corneal opacity, ectasia, corneal xerosis and total corneal pannus (blinding sequelae). 4. Other sequelae may be chronic dacryocystitis, and chronic dacryoadenitis
  • 94.
  • 95. • Complications • The only complication of trachoma is corneal ulcer which may occur due to rubbing by concretions, or trichiasis with superimposed bacterial infection.
  • 96. Diagnosis • A. The clinical diagnosis is made from its typical signs; at least 2 sets of signs should be present : 1. Conjunctival follicles and papillae 2. Pannus progressive or regressive 3. Epithelial keratitis near superior limbus 4. Signs of cicatrisation or its sequelae • Clinical grading of each case :as per WHO classfication into TF, TI, TS, TT or CO.
  • 97. • B. Laboratory diagnosis. Advanced laboratory tests includes : • 1. Conjunctival cytology. Giemsa stained smears : a pred polymorphonuclear reaction +plasma cells and Leber cells is suggestive. • 2. Detection of inclusion bodies in conjunctival smear by Giemsa stain, iodine stain or immunofluorescent staining esp in active trachoma
  • 98. 3. ELISA for chlamydial antigens. 4. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is also useful. 5. Isolation of chlamydia is : yolk-sac inoculatn method and tissue culture technique. • Standard single-passage McCoy cell culture requires at least 3 days. • 6. Serotyping of TRIC agents : by detecting specific antibodies using micro-IF method. Direct monoclonal fluorescent antibody microscopy of conjunctival smear is rapid and inexpensive.
  • 99. Differential diagnosis • 1. Trachoma with follicular hypertrophy from acute adenoviral follicular conjunctivitis (epidemic keratoconjunctivitis) asfollows : • Distribution of follicles in trachoma on UTC and fornix, while in EKC : LPC and fornix . • Associated signs such as papillae and pannus are characteristic of trachoma. • In clinically indistinguishable cases, laboratory diagnosis of trachoma helps in differentiation.
  • 100. • 2. Trachoma with papillary hypertrophy differentiated from palpebral form of VKC: • Papillae large in size and cobble-stone arrangement in spring catarrh. • pH of tears is usually alkaline in spring catarrh while in trachoma it is acidic, • Discharge is ropy in spring catarrh. • In trachoma, there may be associated follicles and pannus. • In clinically indistinguishable cases, conjunctival cytology and other laboratory tests for trachoma usually help in diagnosis.
  • 101. Management • The SAFE strategy for trachoma management supported by the WHO and other agencies encompasses Surgery for trichiasis, Antibiotics for active disease, Facial hygiene, and Environmental improvement. • 1 Antibiotics should be administered to those affected and to all family members. A single antibiotic course is not always effective in eliminating infection in an individual, and communities may need to receive annual treatment to suppress infection.
  • 102. • A single dose of azithromycin (20 mg/kg up to 1g) is the treatment of choice. • Erythromycin 500 mg b.d. for 14 days is an alternative for women of childbearing age. • Topical 1% tetracycline ointment is less effective than oral treatment; it should be given for 6 weeks.
  • 103. 2 Facial cleanliness 3 Environmental improvement such as access to adequate water and sanitation, as well as control of flies, is important. 4 Surgery is aimed at relieving entropion and trichiasis and maintaining complete lid closure with bilamellar tarsal rotation
  • 104. Management • A. Treatment of active trachoma • Antibiotics : locally or systemically, but topical treatment ispreferred because: cheaper, no systemic side-effECTS & effective against associated bacterial conjunctivitis • 1. Topical therapy regimes.:consists of 1 percent tetracycline or 1 percent erythromycin eye ointment 4 times a day for 6 weeks or 20 percent sulfacetamide eye drops three times a day along with 1 percent tetracycline eye ointment at bed time for 6 weeks.
  • 105. . 2. Systemic therapy 3. Combined topical and systemic: preferred when the ocular infection is severe (TI) or in associated genital infection. (i) 1 per cent tetracycline or erythromycin eye ointment QID for 6 weeks; and (ii) tetracycline or erythromycin 250 mg orally 4 times a day for 2 weeks
  • 106. • B. Treatment of trachoma sequelae 1. Concretions : removed with a hypodermic needle. 2. Trichiasis treated by epilation, electrolysis or cryolysis . 3. Entropion should be corrected surgically • 4. Xerosis should be treated by artificial tears.
  • 107. • C. Prophylaxis :reinfections and recurrences are likely to occur. • 1. Hygienic measures.health education on trachoma . The use of common towel, handkerchief, surma rods etc. should be discouraged. A good environmental sanitation will reduce the flies. A good water supply would improve washing habits.
  • 108. • 2. Early treatment of conjunctivitis. Every case of conjunctivitis should be treated as early as possible to reduce transmission of disease. • 3. Blanket antibiotic therapy (intermittent treatment). WHO : in endemic areas to minimise the intensity and severity of disease. The regime : apply 1 percent tetracycline eye ointment twice daily for 5 days in a month for 6 months.
  • 109. ADULT INCLUSN CONJUNCTIVITIS • a type of acute follicular conjunctivitis with mucopurulent discharge. • sexually active young adults. • Etiology serotypes D to K of Chlamydia trachomatis. The primary source of infection is urethritis in males and cervicitis in females. • The transmission of infection : to eyes either through contaminated fingers/ contaminated water of swimming pools ( swimming pool conjunctivitis).
  • 110. Urogenital infection 1 In males chlamydia is the m c cause of non- gonococcal urethritis (NGU), also termed non- specific urethritis (NSU). Chlamydial urethritis is frequently asymptomatic in men. C. trachomatis may also cause epididymitis, and can act as a trigger for Reiter's disease. 2 In females chlamydial urethritis typically causes dysuria and discharge. It may progress to pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), carrying a risk of infertility; 5–10% of women with PID develop perihepatitis (Fitz-Hugh–Curtis
  • 111. Clinical features Incubation period : 4-12 days. Symptoms : Ocular discomfort, foreign body sensation, Mild photophobia, and Muco purulent discharge from the eyes. Signs of inclusion conjunctivitis are: • Conj hyperaemia, more marked in fornices. • Acute follicular hypertrophy in LPC • Superficial keratitis in upper half of cornea. • superior micropannus may also occur. • Pre-auricular lymphadenopathy
  • 112.
  • 113.
  • 114. • Clinical course. benign course and often evolves into the chr follicular conjunctivitis, may develop mild conjunctival scarring and superior corneal pannus. • Differential diagnosis must be made from other causes of acute follicular conjunctivitis.
  • 115. TREATMENT 1 Referral to a genitourinary specialist is mandatory, for exclusion of other STI, contact tracing and pregnancy testing. 2 Systemic therapy • Azithromycin 1 g repeated after 1 week is drug of choice, a 2ND or a 3RD dose is required in 30% of cases. • Doxycycline 100 mg b.d. for 10 days (tetracyclines are relatively contraindicated in pregnancy/breastfeeding and in children under 12 years of age).
  • 116. • Erythromycin, amoxicillin and ciprofloxacin are alternatives. 3 Topical antibiotics : erythromycin or tetra cycline ointment : rapid relief of symptoms 4 Reduction of transmission risk abstinence of sexual contact until completion of treatment (1 week after azithromycin), together with other precautions as for any infectious conjunctivitis. • Symptoms take weeks to settle, follicles & corneal infiltrates can take months to resolve due to a prolonged hypersensitivity response to chlamydial antigen
  • 117. Neonatal conjunctivitis • Neonatal conjunctivitis (ophthalmi neonatorum) Is conjunctival inflammation developing within the first month of life. • m c infection in neonates, up to 10%. • identified as a specific entity distinct fM conj in older infants because it is the result of infecTn transm. fm mother to Child during delivery. • any discharge or even watering from the eyes in 1st week of life should arouse suspicion as tears are not formed till then.
  • 118. Causes • C. trachomatis, N. gonorrhoeae and occ HSV (typically HSV-2), which may be associated with severe ocular or systemic complications. • Staph causes mild conjunctivitis; others inc Streptococci, H influenzae & various Gram- negative organisms. • Topical prep used in prophylaxis against infection , themselves cause conjunc irritation. • Despite poor neonatal tear production, a persistently mildly watery eye with recur bact conj may be secondary to congenital NLDO.
  • 119. • Source and mode of infection in three ways: before birth, during birth or after birth. • 1. Before birth infection is very rare through infected liquor amnii in mothers with ruptured membrances. • 2. During birth. most common mode of infection from the infected birth canal esp in face presentation or forceps delivery. • 3. After birth. Infection may occur during first bath of newborn or from soiled clothes or fingers with infected lochia.
  • 120. Diagnosis 1 Timing of onset • Chem irritation: few days. • Gonococcal: first week. • Staphy & other bact: end of the first wk. • Herpes simplex: 1–2 weeks. • Chlamydia: 1–3 weeks. 2 History • Instillation of a prophylactic chemical preparation. • Parental symptoms of sexually transmitted infections.
  • 121. • Recent conjunctivitis in close contacts. • Systemic illness such as pneumonitis, rhinitis and otitis in chlamydial infection, skin vesicles and features of encephalitis in herpes simplex. • Prior persistent watering without inflammation may indicate an uncanalized nasolacrimal duct
  • 122. • Incubation period • It varies depending on the type of the causative agent as shown below: • Causative agent Incubation period • 1. Chemical 4-6 hours • 2. Gonococcal 2-4 days • 3. Other bacterial 4-5 days • 4. Neonatal inclusion conjunctivitis 5-14 days • 5. Herpes simplex 5-7 days
  • 123. • Signs • The type of discharge varies according to the underlying cause. • Reflux of mucopurulent material on pressure over the lacrimal sac is suggestive of delayed canalization of the lacrimal duct. • Severe eyelid oedema occurs in gonococcal infection . • Eyelid and periocular vesicles may occur in HSV infection. • Keratitis in gonococcal or HSV infection.
  • 124.
  • 125. Investigations • Conjunctival scrapings for Gram and Giemsa staining . Multinucleated giant cells may be present on Gram stain in HSV infection. • Conjunctival swabs for bacterial culture ON chocolate agar or Thayer–Martin for N. gonorrhoeae). • Separate conjunctival scrapings PCR, ESP for chlamydia. • Conjunctival scrapings or fluid from skin vesicles can be sent for viral culture for HSV.
  • 126. Treatment • 1 Prophylaxis Antenatal measures : care of mother and treatment of genital infections when suspected. • 2. Natal measures. • Deliveries should be conducted under hygienic conditions taking aseptic measures. • The newborn baby's closed lids should be thoroughly cleansed and dried.
  • 127. • 3. Postnatal measures includeno standard protocol. • A single instillation of povidone-iodine 2.5% solution is eff against common pathogen • Erythromycin 0.5% or tetracycline 1% ointmt • Silver nitrate 1% solution agglutinates gonococci . administered in conjunction with a single intramuscular dose of benzylpenicillin when maternal infection is present. 2 Chemical conjunctivitis does not require treatment apart from artificial tears.
  • 128. 3 Mild conjunctivitis is very common in neonates and may require a broad-spectrum topical antibiotic such as chloramphenicol or fusidic acid. 4 Moderate to severe cases should be investigated as above. • If bacteria evident on Gram stain, a broad- spectrum topical antibiotic STARTED. • Chlamydial infection is treated with oral erythromycin for two weeks. Erythromycin or tetracycline ointment can be used in addition
  • 129. 5 Severe conjunctivitis, or systemic illness requires hospital admission. • Gonococcal conjunctivitis :systemic third- generation cephalosporin. Co-treatment for chlamydia is prudent. • Herpes simplex infection should always be regarded as a systemic condition and is treated with high-dose intravenous aciclovir under paediatric specialist care. Early diagnosis and treatment of encephalitis may be life-saving or prevent serious neurological disability. Topical aciclovir may be considered in addition.
  • 130. • 6 Specialist advice from a microbiologist or paediatrician should be sought as appropriate in patients with severe involvement, particularly with systemic features. A genitourinary specialist referral for the mother and her sexual contacts is important when a sexually-transmitted infection is diagnosed; the neonate should also be screened for other sexually-transmitted infection
  • 131. Viral conj:Adenoviral conjunctivitis • Pathogenesis : an adenovirus (a non- enveloped double-stranded DNA virus). • Infection : sporadic or in epidemics in workplaces (including hospitals), schools and swimming pools. • spread facilitated by ability of virus to survive on dry surfaces for weeks, viral shedding occurs for many days before clinical features • Transmission by contact with respiratory or ocular secretions, including via fomites,
  • 132. Presentation • 1 Non-specific acute follicular conjunctivitis most common . Ocular involvement is milder than in other forms of adenoviral infection although accompanying systemic symptoms such as a sore throat or cold are frequent. 2 Pharyngoconjunctival fever (PCF) is caused by adenovirus serovars 3, 4 and 7. It is spread by droplets within families with upper respiratory tract infection. Keratitis develops in about 30% of cases but is seldom severe.
  • 133. • 3 Epidemic keratoconjunctivitis (EKC) is caused by adenovirus serovars 8, 19 and 37. It is the most severe type and is associated with keratitis in about 80% of cases. 4 Chronic/relapsing adenoviral conjunctivitis, characterized by chronic non- specific follicular/papillary lesions, is rare but can persist for year
  • 134. Signs 1 lid oedema & tender pre-auricular lnopathy. 2 Prominent conjunctival hyperaemia and follicles . 3 Severe inflammation may be associated with conjunctival haemorrhages (usually petechial in adenoviral infection), chemosis, membranes (rare) and pseudomembranes 4 Pseudomembranes or membranes with mild conjunctival scarring after resolution
  • 135.
  • 136. 5 Keratitis is characterized by • Epithelial microcysts during early stage. • Punctate epithelial keratitis develops with in 7–10 days of the onset of symptoms and resolves within 2 weeks. • Focal white subepithelial/anterior stromal infiltrates may develop beneath the fading epithelial lesions, probably as an immune response to the virus , and may persist or recur over months or years 6 Mild anterior uveitis is uncommon.
  • 137. Differential diagnosis 1 Acute haemorrhagic conjunctivitis in tropical areas and usually caused by entero and coxsackievirus. a rapid onset & resolves in 1–2 weeks; conj haemorrhages r seen 2 Herpes simplex virus (HSV) a follicular conjunctivitis, , which is usually unilateral and often associated with skin vesicle 3 Systemic viral infections ( varicella, measles and mumps) follicular conjunctivitis.V-z v : a conj as part of ophthalmic shingles. An HIV conjunctivitis is also recognized.
  • 138. Management • Spontaneous resolutn in 2–weeks. 1 Investigations unnecessary; unless diag is in doubt or the condition unresolved. • Giemsa stain : mononuclear cells in adeno conj & multinucleated giant cells in herpes. • PCR are sensitive and specific for viral DNA. • Viral culture with isolation is the reference standard but expensive , slow (days–weeks), and requires specific transport media. • immunochromatography : detects adeno Ag in tears; sensitivity & specificity are excellent.
  • 139. 2 Reduction of transmission risk hand hygiene, avoidi eye rubbing & towel sharing. disinfection of instruments & clinical surfaces after examinatn of an infected patient (e.g. sodium hypochlorite, povidone-iodine). 3 Topical steroids pred 0.5% q.i.d. in severe memb or pseudomemb adenoviral conj. Symptomatic keratitis : weak topical steroids; use with caution : do not speed resolution only suppress inflamm ; lesions recur after premature stopping. Steroids enhance viral replication & extend period of patients infectivitys. IOP should be monitored.
  • 140. • Other measures • Discontinuation of contact lens wear until resolution. • Artificial tears q.i.d. symptomatic relief. • Cold (or warm) compresses for symptomatic relief. • Removal of symptomatic pseudomembranes or membranes. • Topical antibiotics if secondary bacterial infection is suspected. • Povidone-iodine is very effective against free (although less so against intracellular) adenovirus, and has been proposed as a means of decreasing infectivity.
  • 141. Molluscum contagiosum conjunctivitis • Pathogenesis :Molluscum contagiosum is a skin infection caused by a human specific double-stranded DNA poxvirus which typically affects otherwise healthy children, with a peak incidence between the ages of 2 and 4 years. Transmission is by contact, with subsequent autoinoculation. The eyelash line should be examined carefully in patients with chronic conjunctivitis so as not to overlook a molluscum lesion
  • 142. Diagnosis 1 Presentation is with chronic unilateral ocular irritation and mild discharge. 2 Signs • A pale, waxy, umbilicated nodule on the lid margin associated with follicular conjunctivitis and mild mucoid discharge . • Bulbar nodules and multiple cutaneous lesions that may be confluent may occur in immunocompromised patients. • Untreated long-standing cases may develop a fine epithelial keratitis and sometimes pannus.
  • 143.
  • 144. Treatment • Although the lesions are self-limiting in the immunocompetent, removal is often necessary to address secondary conjunctivitis or for cosmetic reasons. Expression is facilitated by making a small nick in the skin at the margin of the lesion with the tip of a needle.
  • 145. ALLERGIC CONJUNCTIVITIS • immediate (humoral) or delayed (cellular). • conj x 10 sensitive than skin to allergens . • Types 1. Simple allergic conjunctivitis • Hay fever conjunctivitis • Seasonal allergic conjunctivitis (SAC) • Perennial allergic conjunctivitis (PAC) 2. (VKC) 3. Atopic keratoconjunctivitis (AKC) 4. Giant papillary conjunctivitis (GPC) 5. Phlyctenular keratoconjunctivitis (PKC) 6. Contact dermoconjunctivitis (CDC)
  • 146. SIMPLE ALLERGIC CONJUNCTIVITIS • a mild, non-specific allergic conjunctivitis charac by itching, hyperaemia & mild papillary response. Basically, it is an acute or subacute urticarial reaction. • Etiology It is seen in following forms: • 1. Hay fever conjunctivitis. It is commonly associated with hay fever (allergic rhinitis). The common allergens are pollens, grass and animal dandruff..
  • 147. • 2. Seasonal allergic conjunctivitis (SAC). SAC is A response to seasonal allergens such as grass pollens. It is of very common occurrence. • 3. Perennial allergic conjunctivitis (PAC) is a response to perennial allergens such as house dust and mite. It is not so common
  • 148. • Pathology • 1. Vascular response is charac by sudden and extreme vasodilation and increased permeability of vessels leading to exudation. • 2. Cellular response is in the form of conjunctival infiltration and exudation in the discharge of eosinophils, plasma cells and mast cells producing histamine and histamine- like substances. • 3. Conjunctival response is in the form of boggy swelling of conjunctiva followed by increased connective tissue formation and mild papillary hyperplasia.
  • 149. • Clinical picture • Symptoms include intense itching and burning sensation in the eyes associated with watery discharge and mild photophobia. • Signs. (a) Hyperaemia and chemosis which give a swollen juicy appearance to the conjunctiva. (b) Conjunctiva may also show mild papillary reaction. (c) Oedema of lids. • Diagnosis • Diagnosis is made from : (1) typical symptoms and signs; (2) normal conjunctival flora; and (3) presence of abundant eosinophils in the discharge.
  • 150.
  • 151. TREATMENT 1. Artificial tears for mild symptoms 2 Mast cell stabilizers (sodium cromoglicate, nedocromil sodium, lodoxamide) are suitable (except lodoxamide) for long-term use 3 Antihistamines (emedastine, epinastine, levocabastine, bepotastine) for symptomatic exacerbations and are as effective as mast cell stabilizers 4 Combined preparation of an antihistamine and a vasoconstrictor
  • 152. 5 Dual action antihistamine and mast cell stabilizers (azelastine, ketotifen, olopatadine) are often very effective for exacerbations. 6 Topical steroids are effective but rarely necessary. 7 Oral antihistamines for severe symptoms. Some, such as diphenhydramine, cause significant drowsiness and may be useful in aiding sleep; others such as loratadine have less sedative action
  • 153. VERNAL KERATOCONJUNCTIVITIS OR SPRING CATARRH • recurrent, bilateral, interstitial, self-limiting, allergic inflammation having periodic seasonal incidence. • Etiology a hypersensitivity reaction to exoge allergen, such as grass pollens. VKC is an atopic allergic disorder , IgE-mediated mechs play important role. personal or family history of atopic diseases such as hay fever, asthma, or eczema ; peripheral blood shows eosinophilia and inceased serum IgE levels.
  • 154. • Predisposing factors • 1. Age and sex. 4-20 years; more common in boys than girls. • 2. Season. More common in summer; as 'Warm weather conjunctivitis'. • 3. Climate. More prevalent in tropics, less in temperate zones and almost non-existent in cold climate.
  • 155. • Pathology • 1. Conjunctival epith : hyperplasia & sends downward projections into subepith tissue. • 2. Adenoid layer shows marked cellular infiltration by eosinophils, plasma cells, lymphocytes and histiocytes. • 3. Fibrous layer shows proliferation which later on undergoes hyaline changes. • 4. Conjunctival vessels show proliferation, increased permeability & vasodilation. All these lead to formation of mulT pap in the UTC
  • 156. • Symptoms. Spring catarrh is characterised by marked burning and itching sensation which is usually intolerable and accentuated when patient comes in a warm humid atmosphere. • Itching is more marked with palpebral form of disease. • Other associated symptoms include: mild photophobia, lacrimation, stringy (ropy) discharge and heaviness of lids.
  • 157. • Signs : three clinical forms: 1. Palpebral form. UsuallY UTC of b e is involved. • The typical lesion is charac by the presence of hard, flat topped, papillae arrged in a 'cobble- stone' or 'pavement stone', fashion • . In severe cases, papillae may hypertrophy to produce cauliflower like excrescences of 'giant papillae'. • Conjunctival changes are associated with white ropy discharge.
  • 158.
  • 159. 2. Bulbar form. It is characterised by: (i) dusky red triangular congestion of bulbar conjunctiva in palpebral area; (ii) gelatinous thickened accumulation of tissue around the limbus; and (iii) presence of discrete whitish raised dots along the limbus (Tranta's spots). • 3. Mixed form. It shows combined features of both palpebral and bulbar forms .
  • 160.
  • 161.
  • 162. • Vernal keratopathy. Corneal involvement in VKC may be primary or secondary to extensn of limbal lesions. Vernal keratopathy includes following 5 types of lesions: • 1. Punctate epithelial keratitis involving upper cornea is usually associated with palpebral form of disease. The lesions always stain with rose bengal and with fluorescein dye. • 2. Ulcerative vernal keratitis (shield ulceratioN a shallow transverse ulcer in upper part of cornea. results due to epitheliaL macro erosions.may be complicated by bacterial keratitis.
  • 163.
  • 164. • 3. Vernal corneal plaques result due to coating of bare areas of epithelial macroerosions with a layer of altered exudates . • 4. Subepithelial scarring occurs in the form of a ring scar. • 5. Pseudogerontoxon is characterised by a classical ‘cupid’s bow’ outline.
  • 165.
  • 166. • Clinical course of disease is often self-limiting and usually burns out spontaneously after 5- 10 years. • Differential diagnosis. Palpebral form of VKC needs to be differentiated from trachoma with pre-dominant papillary hypertrophy
  • 167. • A. Local therapy • 1. Topical steroids. These are effective in all forms of spring catarrh. However they frequently cause steroid induced glaucoma. monitoring of intraocular pressure. Frequent instillation (4 hourly) to start with (2 days) should be followed by maintenance therapy for 3-4 times a day for 2 weeks. • fluorometholone , betamethasone or dexamethasone.
  • 168. Treatment • General measures • 1 Allergen avoidance, if possible. An allergy specialist opinion can be requested if appropriate; allergen patch testing is sometimes useful, but often gives non-specific findings. 2 Cool compresses may be helpful. 3 Lid hygiene should be used for associated staphylococcal blepharitis. Moisturizing cream such as E45 can be applied to dry fissured skin.
  • 169. Local treatment 1 Mast cell stabilizers reduce frequency of acute exacerbations & need for steroids, al though seldom effective in isolation. Sev days of treatment are needed & in some cases long-term therapy may be needed. In some patients adding a NSAID (ketorolac, diclofe nac) may give added benefit. 2 Antihistamines are suitable for acute exacerbations but generally not for long-term use. A trial of several different agents may be worthwhile.
  • 170. 3 Combined preparations of an antihistamine and a vasoconstrictor usually offer only limited relief while dual action antihistamine /mast cell stabilizers are often effective. 4 Steroids are used for (a) severe exacerbation of conjunctivitis and (b) sig keratopathy in which reducing conjunctival activity leads to corneal improvement. • Steroids (fluorometholone 0.1%, rimexolone 1%, prednisolone 0.5% or loteprednol etabonate 0.2% or 0.5%) are prescribed in short but intensive courses, aiming for prompt tapering.
  • 171. • Stronger prep like prednisolone 1% can be used but carry a higher risk of steroid-induced glaucoma. • Supratarsal steroid injection considered in severe palpebral disease, for non-compliance or patients resistant to conventional therapy. injection is given into the conjunctival surface of the anaesthetized everted upper eyelid; 0.1 mL of betamethasone sodium phosphate 4 mg/mL (Betnesol), dexamethasone 4 mg/mL or triamcinolone 40 mg/mL is given.
  • 172. • 5 Immune modulators a Ciclosporin 0.05% b.d. indicated if steroids are ineffective, inadequate or poorly tolerated, or as a steroid-sparing agent in patients with severe disease. The drug may cause ocular irritation and blurred vision when used for several weeks and relapses occur if stopped suddenly. b Tacrolimus 0.03% ointment can be effective in AKC for severe eyelid disease. Instillation into the fornices has been effective in modulating conjunctival inflammation in refractory cases.
  • 173. • 6 Other measures a Antibiotics are used in conjunction with steroids in severe keratopathy to prevent or treat bacterial infection. b Acetylcysteine is a mucolytic agent that is useful in VKC for dissolving mucus filaments and deposits, and addressing early plaque formation
  • 174. Systemic treatment 1 Antihistamines help itching, promote sleep and reduce nocturnal eye rubbing. Because other inflammatory mediators are involved besides histamines, effectiveness is not assured. 2 Antibiotics (doxycycline 50–100 mg daily for 6 weeks or azithromycin 500 mg once daily for 3 days) to reduce blepharitis-aggravated inflammation, usually in AKC.
  • 175. • 3 Immunosuppressive agents (e.g. steroids, ciclosporin, tacrolimus, azathioprine) may be effective at relatively low doses in AKC unresponsive to other measures. Short courses of high-dose steroids may be necessary to achieve rapid control in severe disease. Monoclonal antibodies against T cells have shown some promise in refractory cases. 4 Aspirin may be useful in VKC, although the risk of Reye's syndrome means it should be avoided in children and adolescents (the group predominantly affected by VKC)
  • 176. • Surgery 1 Bandage contact lens wear : aid the healing of persistent epithelial defects. 2 Superficial keratectomy reqd to remove plaques or debride shield ulcers and allow epithelialization. Med treatmt be maintained until the cornea has reepithelialized in order to prevent recurrences. Excimer laser PTK is an alternative.
  • 177. • 3 Surface maintenance-restoration surgery amniotic membrane overlay grafting or LK, or eyelid procedures such as botulinum toxin- induced ptosis or lateral tarsorrhaphy, may be required for severe persistent epithelial defects or ulceration. Gluing may be appropriate for focal (‘punched-out’) corneal perforations
  • 178. Atopic keratoconjunctivitis (AKC) • an adult equivalent of vernal KC and assoc with atopic dermatitis. Most of the patients are young atopic adults, with male predominance. Symptoms include: • Itching, soreness, dry sensation. • Mucoid discharge. • Photophobia or blurred vision.
  • 179. Signs :Lid margins chron inflamed with rounded posterior borders. • Skin changes consist of erythema, dryness, scaliness and thickening, sometimes with fissuring, and scratches (‘excoriation’) due to intense itching. • Assoc staphy blepharitis and madarosis • Keratinization of the lid margiIN • Hertoghe sign is characterized by absence of the lateral portion of the eyebrows • Tightening of the facial skin may cause lower lid ectropion and epiphora.
  • 180. • Conj involvement is pref inferior palpebral, in VKC superiorly. • Discharge is more watery than in VKC. • Papillae initially smaller than VKC ; larger lesions develop later • Diffuse conjunctival infiltration and scarring may give a whitish, featureless appearance • Cicatricial changes lead to mod sym blepharon, forniceal shortening, keratinization of the caruncle
  • 181.
  • 182. • Limbal involvement , including Horner–Trantas dots, Tarsal conjunctiva has milky app. There are very fine papillae, hyperaemia and scarring with shrinkage. • Keratopathy a Punctate epithelial erosions over inferior third of the cornea are common b Persistent epithelial defects, with associated focal thinning, can occasionally progress to perforation. c Plaque formation may occur.
  • 183. d Peripheral vascularization and stromal scarring are more common than in VKC. e Other manifestations • Predisposition to secondary bacterial and fungal infection, and to aggressive herpes simplex keratitis • Keratoconus is common (about 15%) and secondary to chronic ocular rubbing.
  • 184. • 5 Cataract • Presenile shield-like anterior or posterior subcapsular cataracts are common , exacer by long-term steroid RX • Because of the high lid margin carriage of S. aureus, cataract surgery carries an increased risk of endophthalmitis. 6 Retinal detachment is more common than in the general population corneal vascularization, thinning and plaques.
  • 185. Clinical course. Like the dermatitis with which it is associated, AKC has a protracted course with exacerbations and remissions. Like vernal keratoconjunctivitis it tends to become inactive when the patient reaches the fifth decade. Treatment is often frustrating. • Treat facial eczema and lid margin disease. • Same as VKC
  • 186. Giant (mechanically-induced) papillary conjunctivitis • Pathogenesis :Mechanically-induced papillary conjunctivitis, the severe form of which is known as giant papillary conjunctivitis (GPC), can occur secondary to a variety of mechanical stimuli of the tarsal conjunctiva. It is most frequently seen with contact lens (CL) wear, when it is termed contact lens- associated papillary conjunctivitis (CLPC).
  • 187. • The risk is increased by the build-up of proteinaceous deposits and cellular debris on the contact lens surface . Ocular prostheses, exposed sutures and scleral buckles, corneal surface irregularity and filtering blebs can all be responsible. A related phenomenon is the so-called ‘mucus fishing syndrome’, when, in a variety of underlying anterior segment disorders, patients develop or exacerbate a chronic papillary reaction due to repetitive manual removal of mucus
  • 188. Diagnosis 1 Symptoms foreign body sensation, redness, itching, increased mucus production, blurring and loss of CL tolerance. Symptoms may be worse after lens removal. Patients should be questioned about CL cleaning and maintenance. 2 Signs • Variable mucous discharge. • Protein deposits on the CL. • Excessive CL mobility . • Superior tarsal hyperaemia and initially fine-medium size papillae (>0.3 mm).
  • 189.
  • 190. • Focal apical ulceration and whitish scarring may develop on larger papillae in advanced cases. • Keratopathy is rare because of the relatively subdued secretion of inflammatory cytokines. • Ptosis may occur mainly as a result of irritative spasm and tissue laxity secondary to chronic inflammation.
  • 191. Treatment 1 Remove the stimulus • CL wear should be discontinued for several weeks . • For mild–moderate disease, this may be adequate for resolution, sometimes in conjunction with reduced wearing time. • In severe disease a longer interval without lens wear may be needed. • Removal of other underlying causes such as exposed sutures or scleral buckle. • Assessmt of the status & fit of oc prosthesiS • Refashioning filtering blebs or GDD.
  • 192. • 2 Ensure effective cleaning of CL or prosthesis • Changing the type of CL solution, ESP preservative-containing prep. • Switching to mthly then daily disposable CL if the condition persists after renewing non-disposable lenses. • Rigid lenses carry a lesser risk of CLPC (5%) because they are easier to clean . • Cessation of CL wear and substituting spectacles or refractive surgery for severe or refractory disease.
  • 193. • Regular (at least weekly) use of contact lens protein removal tablets. • Prostheses should be cleaned & polished • Topical • Mast cell stabilizers should be non- preserved in patients wearing soft contact lenses, or can be instilled when the lenses are not in the eye, with a delay of perhaps half an hour after drop instillation prior to lens insertion. can be continued long-term . .
  • 194. • Antihistamines, non-steroidal anti- inflammatory agents and combined antihistamines/mast cell stabilizers may each be of benefit. • Topical steroids can be used for the acute phase of resistant cases, particularly those where effective removal of the stimulus is difficult, as in bleb-related disease
  • 195. PHLYCTENULAR KERATOCONJUNCTIVITIS • Phlyctenular keratoconjunctivitis is a characteristic nodular affection occurring as an allergic response of the conjunctival and corneal epithelium to some endogenous allergens to which they have become sensitized. Phlyctenular conjunctivitis is of worldwide distribution. However, its incidence is higher in developing countries.
  • 196. • Etiology It is believed to be a delayed hypersensitivity (Type IV-cell mediated) response to endogenous microbial proteins. I. Causative allergens 1. Tuberculous proteins were considered, previously, as the most common cause. • 2. Staphylococcus proteins are now thought to account for most of the cases. • 3. Other allergens may be proteins of Moraxella Axenfeld bacillius and certain parasites (worm infestation).
  • 197. • II. Predisposing factors • 1. Age. Peak age group is 3-15 years. • 2. Sex. Incidence is higher in girls than boys. • 3. Undernourishment. Disease is more common in undernourished children. • 4. Living conditions. Overcrowded & unhygienic. • 5. Season. It occurs in all climates but incidence is high in spring and summer seasons.
  • 198. Pathology • 1. Stage of nodule formation. In this stage there occurs exudation and infiltration of leucocytes into the deeper layers of conjunctiva leading to a nodule formation. The central cells are polymorphonuclear and peripheral cells are lymphocytes. • The neighbouring blood vessels dilate and their endothelium proliferates.
  • 199. • 2. Stage of ulceration. Later on necrosis occurs at the apex of the nodule and an ulcer is formed. Leucocytic infiltration increases with plasma cells and mast cells. • 3. Stage of granulation. Eventually floor of the ulcer becomes covered by granulation tissue. • 4. Stage of healing. Healing occurs usually with minimal scarring
  • 200. Clinical picture • Symptoms in simple phlyctenular conjunctivitis are few, like mild discomfort in the eye, irritation and reflex, watering. However there is associated mucopurulent conjunctivitis due to secondary bacterial infection. • Signs. The phlyctenular conjunctivitis can present in three forms: simple, necrotizing and miliary.
  • 201. • 1. Simple phylctenular conjunctivitis. It is the most commonly seen variety. It is characterised by the presence of a typical pinkish white nodule surrounded by hyperaemia on the bulbar conjunctiva, usually near the limbus. Most of the times there is solitary nodule but at times there may be two nodules . In a few days the nodule ulcerates at apex which later on gets epithelised. Rest of the conjunctiva is normal.
  • 202.
  • 203. • 2. Necrotizing phlyctenular conjunctivitis is characterised by the presence of a very large phlycten with necrosis and ulceration leading to a severe pustular conjunctivitis. • 3. Miliary phlyctenular conjunctivitis is characterised by the presence of multiple phlyctens which may be arranged haphazardly or in the form of a ring around the limbus and may even form a ring ulcer.
  • 204. Phlyctenular keratitis • . Corneal involvement may occur secondarily from extension of conjunctival phlycten; or rarely as a primary disease. It may present in two forms: the 'ulcerative phlyctenular keratitis' or 'diffuse infiltrative keratitis A. Ulcerative phlyctenular keratitis may occur in the following three forms: • 1. Sacrofulous ulcer is a shallow marginal ulcer formed due to breakdown of small limbal phlycten
  • 205. • . It differs from the catarrhal ulcer in that there is no clear space between the ulcer and the limbus and its long axis is frequently perpendicular to limbus. Such an ulcer usually clears up without leaving any opacity. • 2. Fascicular ulcer has a prominent parallel leash of blood vessels . This ulcer usually remains superficial but leaves behind a bandshaped superficial opacity after healing. • 3. Miliary ulcer. In this form multiple small ulcers are scattered over a portion of or whole of the cornea.
  • 206.
  • 207. • B. Diffuse infiltrative phlyctenular keratitis may appear in the form of central infiltration of cornea with characteristic rich vascularization from the periphery, all around the limbus. It may be superficial or deep. • Clinical course is usually self-limiting and phlycten disappears in 8-10 days leaving no trace. However, recurrences are very common.
  • 208. Differential diagnosis • Phlyctenular conjunctivitis needs to be differentiated from the episcleritis, scleritis, and conjunctival foreign body granuloma. • Presence of one or more whitish raised nodules on the bulbar conjunctiva near the limbus, with hyperaemia usually of the surrounding conjunctiva, in a child living in bad hygienic conditions (most of the times) are the diagnostic features of the phlyctenular conjunctivitis.
  • 209. Management 1. Local therapy. i. Topical steroids . ii. Antibiotic drops and ointment to take care of the associated secondary infection. iii. Atropine (1%) when cornea is involved. 2. Specific therapy. eradicate causative conditns i. Tuberculous infection should be excluded. ii. Septic focus tonsillitis, adenoiditis, or caries teeth, iii. Parasitic infestation should be ruled out.
  • 210. CONTACT DERMOCONJUNCTIVITIS • an allergic disorder, involving conjunctiva and skin of lids along with surrounding face. • Etiology • It is a delayed hypersensitivity (type IV) response to prolonged contact with chemicals and drugs. • common topical ophthalmic medications which cdc are • atropine, penicillin, neomycin, soframycin and gentamycin..
  • 211. • Clinical picture • 1. Cutaneous involvement is in the form of weeping eczematous reaction, involving all areas with which medication comes in contact. • 2. Conjunctival response is in the form of hyperaemia with a generalised papillary response affecting the lower fornix and lower palpebral conjunctiva more than the upper
  • 212. • Diagnosis is made from: Typical clinical picture. Conjunctival cytology shows a lymphocytic response with masses of eosinophils. Skin test to the causative allergen is positive in most of the cases. • Treatment consists of: 1. Discontinuation of the causative medication, 2. Topical steroid eye drops to relieve symptoms 3. Application of steroid ointment on the involved skin.
  • 213. Conj in blistering mucocutaneous diseases• Mucous membrane pemphigoid • S–J syndrome-TEN(Lyell syndrome) • Atopic (and less commonly vernal) KC • Conjunctival chemical and thermal burns • Severe bacterial or viral conjunctivitis • Trachom • Drug-induced • OtherS: epidermolysis bullosa, pemph vulg, linear IgA disease, dermatitis herpetiformis, lichen planus, porphyria cutanea tarda, xerode pigmentosum, scleroderma, xerophthalmia
  • 214. Mucous membrane pemphigoid • (MMP)/ cicatricial pemphigoid (CP): a chr autoimmune mucocutaneous blistering diseases charac by linear antibody and complement deposition at epithelial BM • involve the skin & mucous membranes of the mouth, nasopharynx, upper airways, genitalia, and gastrointestinal tract. • Particular clinical forms :bullous pemphigoid (BP) shows a predilection for skin, also affects the mouth and other tissues. (OCP) involves the conjunctiva and causes (cicatrization).
  • 215. • The disease typically presents in old age and affects females more than males 2 : 1 ratio • Ocular features • 1 Presentation is with the insidious onset of non-specific conjunctivitis which is bilateral, but frequently asymmetrical. Because of its rarity, the diagnosis is often overlooked or there may be misdiagnosis, with specific treatment being delayed.
  • 216. 2 Conjunctiva • Papillary conjunctivitis, diffuse hyperaemia and oedema, and necrosis • Fine lines of subconjunctival fibrosis and shortening of the inferior fornices . • Flattening of the plica and keratinization of the caruncle . • Symblepharon (plural symblephara) is an adhesion between the bulbar and palpebral conjunctiva . • Dry eye is caused by a combination of destruction of goblet cells and accessory lacrimal glands as well as occlusion of the main lacrimal ductules. .
  • 217. • The chronically progressive course of the disease may be punctuated by exacerbations. • Disease progression should be regularly monitored by measuring the depth of the fornices and noting the position of adhesion • 3 Cornea • Epithelial defects associated with drying and exposure • Infiltration and peripheral vascularization • Keratinization and ‘conjunctivalization’ of the corneal surface following damage to the limbus & conseq epithelial stem cell failure • End-stage disease is characterized by total symblepharon and corneal opacification (
  • 218. • 4 Eyelids • Aberrant (dysplastic) lashes, chronic blepharitis and keratinization of the lid margin. • Ankyloblepharon, in which there are adhesions at the outer canthus between the upper and lower lids.s
  • 219.
  • 220.
  • 221. • Systemic features • 1 Mucosal involvement is characterized by subepidermal blisters, frequently oral . The blisters rupture within a day or two leaving erosions & ulcers that heal without significant scarring. Ulcers in other sites typically heal with scarring which result in stricture formatn. Stricture of the oesophagus can result in regurgitation and aspiration of food. Laryngeal or tracheal stenosis may be life-threatening. 2 Skin lesions less common (25%) present as tense blisters and erosions. involve head and neck , the groins and extremities
  • 222.
  • 223. Systemic treatment • 1 Dapsone first-line treatment in patients with mild–moderate disease, at1 mg/kg daily increasing to 100 mg or 200 mg, if tolerated; approximately 70% of patients respond. The drug is contraindicated in G6PD deficiency. 2 Antimetabolites such as azathioprine, methotrexate or mycophenolate mofetil are alternatives for mild–moderate disease if dapsone is contraindicated, ineffective or poorly tolerated, and are suitable for long- term therapy.
  • 224. • 3 Steroids (oral prednisolone 1–1.5 mg/kg) are effective for rapid disease control, but adverse effects virtually preclude the long- term use of higher doses. 4 Other measures • Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy has shown promising results in some patients unresponsive to other agents. • Ciclosporin has been used with apparent benefit although data to support its effect are limited.
  • 225. • Local treatment • 1 Topical • Artificial tears • Steroids as adjunctive treatment. • Retinoic acid may reduce keratinization. • Antibiotics when indicated. • Lid hygiene and low-dose oral tetracycline for blepharitis. 2 Subconjunctival mitomycin-C and/or steroid injection may be used if systemic immunosuppression is not possible. 3 Contact lenses may be used with caution to protect the cornea from aberrant lashes and from dehydration.
  • 226. • Reconstructive surgery under systemic steroid cover, considered when active disease is controlled. • • Aberrant eye lashes can be treated by laser ablation or cryotherapy; the latter may be combined with lid splitting • Severe dry eyes may be helped by punctal occlusion if no punc scarring. • Promotion of healing of persistent or recu corneal epithelial defects by lat tarsorr haphy or botulinum toxin-induced ptosis.
  • 227. • • Entropion managed by a procedure (e.g. retractor plication) that does not involve conjunctival incision. • Conjunctival keratinization may be addressed by mucous membrane autografting (e.g. oral) or amniotic membrane transplantation; these techniques can also be used for forniceal restoration. • Limbal stem cell transfer may be attempted for corneal epithelialization failure. • Keratoplasty carries a high risk of failure due to surface morbidity; lamellar grafts may be effective for perforations. • Keratoprostheses in end-stage disease.
  • 228. Stevens–Johnson syndrom TEN (Lyell syndrome) • Definition :Previously, the terms ‘Stevens– Johnson syndrome (SJS)’ and ‘erythema multiforme major’ used synonymously. However, i now erythema multiforme is a distinct disease, milder and recurrent, dissimilar c f and a tendency for diff ppitating factors (erythema multiforme predominantly infections, Stevens–Johnson predominantly drugs).
  • 229. • ‘Toxic epidermal necrolysis’ (TEN – Lyell syndrome) is a severe variant of SJS. Classically, SJS/TEN patients tend to be young adults, though other age groups, including children and the elderly, may be affected. An SJS-type presentation is more common in males than females, with the reverse probably true for TEN
  • 230. • Pathogenesis • a cell-mediated delayed hypersensitivity immune reaction , either directly to drugs or to epithelial cell antigens modified by drug exposure. drugs incriminated includE antibiotics (esp sulfonamides and trimetho prim), analgesics, cough and cold remedies, cocaine, NSAIDS, anticonvulsants allopurinol. • Micro-org incl Mycoplasma pneumoniae and herpes simplex virus (HSV). Because symp take 3 wks to develop after exp, in 50% ppting cause cant be identified with certainty.
  • 231. • 1 Presentation is with flu-like symptoms which last up to 14 days before the app of mucocutaneous lesions. 2 Acute signs • Haemorrhagic crusting of lid margins that may become confluent. • Papillary conjunctivitis, which can range from mild, transient & self-limiting to severe. • Conjunctival membranes & pseudo membranes, severe hyperaemia, hrhages, blisters and patchy infarction. • Keratopathy : a spectrum fm punctate erosions to larger epithelial defects, secondary bacterial keratitis and occasi perforation.
  • 232. • Late signs • Keratinization of the conjunctiva and lid margi, sometimes with abrasive plaque formation. • Posterior lid margin disease with opening of meibomian gland orifices onto the lid surface . • Forniceal shortening and symblepharon formation. • Eyelid complications include cicatricial entropion and ectropion, trichiasis, metaplastic lashes and ankyloblepharon.
  • 233. • Keratopathy including scarring, vascularization and keratinization as a result of the primary inflammation and/or infection, as well as cicatricial entropion and aberrant lashes. • Watery eyes due to fibrosis of the lacrimal puncta. Dry eyes may also occur as a result of fibrosis of lacrimal gland ductules and conjunctival metaplasia with loss of goblet cells.
  • 234.
  • 235. • Systemic features • 1 Mucosal involvement is characterized by blistering and haemorrhagic crusting of the lips . The blisters may also involve the tongue, oropharynx, nasal mucosa and occasionally the genitalia. 2 Skin • Small purpuric, vesicular or necrotic lesions involving the extremities, face and trunk . These are usually transient but may be widespread. Healing usually occurs within 1–4 weeks, leaving a pigmented scar. • Widespread sloughing of the epidermis is uncommon.
  • 236. • 3 ‘Target’ lesions showing the classic three zones are now viewed as characteristic of erythema multiforme rather than SJS/TEN, but the mucosal lesions appear similar in both conditions
  • 237.
  • 238. • Systemic treatment • 1 Removal of the precipitant if possible, such as discontinuation of drugs and treatment of suspected infection. 2 General supportive measures such as maintenance of adequate hydration, electrolyte balance and nutrition (especially protein replacement) are critical. Management in a specialist burns unit should reduce the chance of infection when the extent of skin involvement is substantial.
  • 239. • 3 Systemic steroids remain controversial. There are reports of increased mortality in older papers, but later research has raised the possibility that early high-dose intravenous treatment may improve outcomes. 4 Other immunosuppressants including ciclosporin, azathioprine, cyclophosphamide and intravenous immunoglobulin may be considered in selected cases, but are controversial and controlled trials are lacking. 5 Systemic antibiotics may be given as prophylaxis against skin or other systemic infection, avoiding those known to be at higher risk of precipitating SJS/TEN
  • 240. • Ocular treatment • 1 Acute disease • Topical lubricants. • Topical steroids may be used but their efficacy has not been demonstrated conclusively. • Lysis of developing symblephara with a sterile glass rod or damp cotton bud. • A scleral ring, consisting of a large haptic lens with the central zone removed, may help to prevent symblepharon formation . • Pseudomembrane/membrane peeling can be considered • Treatment of bacterial keratitis.
  • 241. • 2 Chronic disease management addressing complications. • Adequate lubrication, including punctal occlusion if necessary. • Topical transretinoic acid 0.01% or 0.025% may reverse keratinization. • Treatment of aberrant lashes. • Bandage contact lenses (typically gas permeable scleral lenses ) to maintain surface moisture, protect the cornea from aberrant lashes, and address irregular astigmatism. • Mucous membrane grafting (e.g. buccal mucosa autograft) for forniceal reconstruction.
  • 242. • 3 Corneal rehabilitation may involve the following: • Superficial keratectomy for keratinization. • In eyes with reasonable stem cell function, lamellar corneal grafting may be used for superficial scarring and is generally preferred to penetrating keratoplasty. • Amniotic membrane grafting. • Limbal stem cell transplantation (cadaveric or living relative). • Keratoprosthesis implantation in end- stage disease.
  • 243.
  • 244. Superior limbic keratoconjunctivitis • uncommon chr disease of the superior limbus and the superior bulbar and tarsal conjunc. • affects both eyes of middle-aged women, approx 50% of whom have abnormal thyroid function (usually hyperthyroidism); approx 3% of patients with thyroid eye disease have SLK. • symptoms are more severe than signs. course over years although remission spontaneous. • similarities to mech-induced papillary conj, contact lens wear and following upper lid surgery or trauma.
  • 245. Diagnosis 1 Presentation : non-specific symptoms often intermittent: FB sensation, burning, mild photophobia, mucoid disch & freq blinking. 2 Conjunctiva Papillary hypertrophy of the superior tarsus, often a diffuse velvety app. • Hyperaemia of a radial band of the sup bulbar conjunctiva & limbal pap hypertrophy . • Light downward pressure on the upper lid results in a fold of redundant conjunctiva crossing the upper limbus . • Petechial haemorrhages may be present.
  • 246. • 3 Cornea • Superior punctate corneal epithelial erosions are common and are often separated from the limbus by a zone of normal epithelium. • Superior filamentary keratitis develops in about one-third of cases. • Mild superior pannus resembling arcus senilis may develop in long-standing disease. 4 Keratoconjunctivitis sicca is present in only about 50% of cases. 5 Thyroid function testing should be performed if the patient is not already known to have thyroid dysfunction.
  • 247.
  • 248. Treatment 1 Topical a Lubricants to reduce friction b/n the tarsal & bulbar conjunctiva b Acetylcysteine 5% or 10% q.i.d. to break down filaments and provide lubrication. c Mast cell stabilizers antiinflammatory ; steroids : best used in short intensive courses with rapid tapering, esp severe cases. d Ciclosporin 0.05% b.d. as prim or adjunctive therapy, esp in keratoconjunctivitis sicca e Retinoic acid to retard keratinization f Auto serum 20% drops; up to 10 times/ day
  • 249. 2 Soft contact lenses between the lid and the superior conjunctiva, are effective in some cases. , a unilat lens may provide bilatl relief. 3 Supratarsal steroid injection. 0.1 mL of triamcinolone 40 mg/mL antiinflammatory. 4 Temporary superior and/or inferior punctal occlusion using a plug. 5 Resection of sup limbal conj, in a zone 2 mm from the sup limbus or of area staining with rose bengal, in resistant disease. Lax conj removed, with regrowth firmly anchored. 6 Conjunctival ablation by Ag NO3 0.5% or thermocautery to the affected area. 7 Treatment of assoc thyroid dysfunction.
  • 250. Ligneous conjunctivitis • a very rare disorder charac by recurrent, often bilat fibrin-rich pseudomembranous lesions of wood-like consistency that develop on the tarsal conj. • It is a systemic condition which may involve the periodontal tissue, the upper and lower respiratory tract, kidneys, middle ear and female genitalia. It can be sight-threatening, and death can occasionally occur from pulmonary involvement.
  • 251. Diagnosis 1 Presentation is with nonspecific conjunc, usually in childhood (median age 5 years), although onset may be at any age. . 2 Signs • Red-white lobular conjunctival masses . • The lesions may be covered by a yellow- white thick mucoid discharge . • Corneal scarring, vascularization, infection or melting in advanced disease.
  • 252.
  • 253. Treatment Treatment: unsatisfactory & spont resolutn rare. discontinue any antifibrinolytic drugs. 1 Surgical removal with diathermy of the base of the lesion. Pre-op topical plasminogen may soften pseudomembranes and facilitate removal. 2 Topical • Foll membrane removal, hrly heparin and steroids are given until the wound has re-epithelialized, with tapering over weeks until signs of inflamm disappear. • Recurrence may be retarded by long- term ciclosporin and steroid instillation.
  • 254. • 3 Other modalities • Intravenous or topical plasminogen. • Amniotic membrane transplantation to the conjunctiva following lesion removal.
  • 255. GRANULOMATOUS CONJUNCTIVITIS • specific chronic inflammations of the conjunctiva, characterised by proliferative lesions which r localized to one eye and associated with regional lymphadenitis • Tuberculosis of conjunctiva • Sarcoidosis of conjunctiva • Syphilitic conjunctivitis • Leprotic conjunctivitis • Conjunctivitis in tularaemia • Ophthalmia nodosa
  • 256. • Parinaud's oculoglandular syndrome : group of conditions characterised by: 1. Unilateral granulomatous conjunctivitis (nodular elevations surrounded by follicles), 2. Preauricular lymphadenopathy, and 3. Fever. • Its common causes are tularaemia, cat- scratch disease, tuberculosis, syphilis and lymphogranuloma venereum
  • 257.
  • 258. • Ophthalmia nodosa (Caterpillar hair conjunctivitis) a granulomatous inflammation of the conjunctiva characterized by formation of a nodule on the bulbar conjunctiva in response to irritation caused by the retained hair of caterpillar. • The disease is, therefore common in summers. may be often mistaken for a tubercular nodule. • Histopathological examination reveals hair surrounded by giant cells and lymphocytes. • Treatment consists of excision biopsy of the nodule.
  • 259. Factitious conjunctivitis • Self-injury often intentional: inadvertently in mucous fishing syndrome & contact lens removal . • Damage may be the result of either mechanical abrasion or perforation, or of the instillation of irritant but readily accessible household substances, such as soap. • Occasionally over-instillation of prescribed ocular medication is responsible.
  • 260. Diagnosis • Inferior conjunct injection & staining with rose bengal , with a quiet sup bulbar conjunc. • Linear K abrasions, persistent epithelial defects & occasionally focal K perforation. • Secondary infection with Candida spp. • Sterile ring infiltrate and hypopyon. • Corneal scarring. • The patient may have sought multiple medical opinions over an extended perioD • symptoms disproportionate to signs.
  • 261.
  • 262. Management • Exclude other diagnoses. • Close observation may be required • Confrontation often leads to failure to return for review. • A psychiatric opinion may be appropriate.
  • 263. Degenerations : Pingueculum • A pingueculum : common, innocuous, bilat and asymptomatic ‘elastotic’ degeneration of collagen fibres of conjunctival stroma. • The cause is : actinic damage, similar to the aetiology of pterygium . • 1 Signs. A yellow-white mound or aggregn of smaller mounds on bulbar conjunc adjacent to the limbus. more frequently located at the nasal than the temporal limbus , although is frequently present at both. Calcification is occasionally visible.
  • 264. • 2 Treatment is usually unnecessary because growth is very slow or absent. Occasionally, however, a pingueculum may become acutely inflamed (pingueculitis) and require a short course of a weak steroid such as fluorometholone. Excision is occasionally performed for cosmetic reasons or if a large lesion is causing significant irritation
  • 265.
  • 266. Pterygium • A pterygium is a triangular fibrovascular subepithelial ingrowth of degen bulbar conj tissue over the limbus onto the cornea. • It typically develops in patients who living in hot climates and, as with pinguecula, may represent a response to ultraviolet exposure and possibly to other factors such as chronic surface dryness. • A pterygium is histo similar to a pingueculum and shows elastotic degenerative changes in vascularized subepithelial stromal collagen
  • 267.
  • 268. Types • . Depending upon the progression it may be progressive or regressive pterygium. • Progressive pterygium is thick, fleshy and vascular with a few infiltrates in the cornea, in front of the head of the pterygium (called cap of pterygium). • Regressive pterygium is thin, atrophic, attenuated with very little vascularity. There is no cap. Ultimately it becomes membranous but never disappears.
  • 269. Clinical features • Symptoms • asymptomatic. • Irritation & grittiness caused by dellen effect advancing edge d/t interference with tear film. • Pts using contact lenses develop symptoms of irritation at an earlier stage due to edge lift. • Interference with vision by obscuring the visual axis or inducing astigmatism. • Intermittent inflam similar to pingueculitis • Cosmesis may be a significant problem • If pseudopterygium is suspected, there may be a history of a causative episode
  • 270. • Signs. A pterygium is made of 3 parts: a ‘cap’ (an avascular halo-like zone at the advancing edge), a head, and a body. a Type 1 extends less than 2 mm onto the cornea . A deposit of iron (Stocker line) may be seen in the corneal epithelium anterior to the advancing head of the pterygium. b Type 2 involves up to 4 mm of the cornea & may be primary or recurrent following surgery c Type 3 encroaches onto more than 4 mm of the cornea and involves the visual axis
  • 271.
  • 273. • d Pseudopterygium is caused by a band of conjunctiva adhering to an area of compromised cornea at its apex. It forms as a response to an acute inflammatory episode such as a chemical burn , corneal ulcer (especially if marginal), trauma and cicatrizing conjunctivitis
  • 274. Treatment • 1 Medical treatment of symptomatic patients involves tear substitutes, & topical steroids for inflammation. The patient may be advised to wear sunglasses to reduce ultraviolet exposure decrease the growth stimulus. • 2 Surgical technique. Simple excision (‘bare sclera’ technique) is associated with a high rate of recurrence (around 80%) that may be more aggressive than the initial lesion. .
  • 275. • Simple conjunctival flap • Conjunctival autografting, currently the most popular approach. The donor conjunctival patch is usually harvested from the superior paralimbal region – the site usually heals well. • Adjunctive treatment with mitomycin C or beta-irradiation; may rarely be complicated by late scleral necrosis. • Amniotic membrane patch grafting ( reserved for aggressive lesns or recurrences). • Occasionally peripheral lamellar keratoplasty is required for deep lesions
  • 276.
  • 277.
  • 278. Concretions • v common & usually assoc with aging,though they can also form in patients with chronic conjun inflam such as trachoma • 1 Signs • Multiple tiny cysts containing yellowish-white deposits of epithelial debris including keratin, usually located subepithelially in the inferior tarsal and forniceal conjunctiva . • Can become calcified and, particularly if large, may erode the overlying epithelium and cause irritation.
  • 279. • 2 Treatment of symptomatic concretions involves removal at the slit-lamp with a needle under topical anaesthesia.
  • 281.