Cases reported "Corneal Diseases"

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1/5. Massive corneal and conjunctival squamous cell carcinoma.

    A patient with massive, protuberant squamous cell carcinoma of conjunctiva invading the whole cornea, so as to hang from the surface, was referred with a visual acuity of hand motion near to face. A microscopically-controlled, frozen section guided excision, followed by double-freeze-thaw cryoapplication to the sclera and the edges of the conjunctival bed and lamello-lamellar sclerokeratoplasty, was performed. Three years later the patient's visual acuity was 20/60 with no evidence of recurrence of the lesion. Frozen section guided excision with adjuvant cryotherapy and lamellar sclerokeratoplasty is a viable therapy for massive squamous cell carcinoma of cornea and conjunctiva.
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2/5. Seoul-type keratoprosthesis: preliminary results of the first 7 human cases.

    OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the clinical efficacy of a newly designed Seoul-type keratoprosthesis (S-KPro). methods: The S-KPro, which consists of a polymethyl methacrylate optic, a skirt (polyurethane or polypropylene), and polypropylene haptics, was developed and implanted into 2 unsighted and 5 sighted eyes of 7 patients. One patient had a chemical burn, another had an ocular pemphigoid, and the remainder were diagnosed as having stevens-johnson syndrome. The preoperative visual acuities ranged from light perception to hand motions. The average follow-up time was 25.6 months. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: We evaluated anatomical stability, visual acuity, retinal status, and the visual field. RESULTS: At the last follow-up visit, the S-KPro was well placed in 6 patients. The best-corrected visual acuities of the sighted patients ranged from 20/100 to 20/60 in the affected eye. One patient each experienced retinal detachment or endophthalmitis. Partial extrusion was found in the patient with glaucoma. A retroprosthetic membrane was detected in 1 patient and was treated with an Nd:YAG laser. No glaucomatous visual field defects were found in any of the sighted patients. CONCLUSIONS: Anatomical success was achieved in 6 of 7 eyes. In 3 of the 5 sighted eyes, the S-KPro could rehabilitate corneal blindness not correctable with keratoplasty.
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3/5. Superior pellucid marginal corneal degeneration.

    PURPOSE: To report the clinical features and topographic findings of superior pellucid marginal corneal degeneration (PMCD). methods: Retrospective chart review of 15 eyes of eight patients of superior PMCD. Detailed history, visual acuity at presentation, degree of astigmatism, slit-lamp examination findings, topographic features, and Orbscan findings were noted where available. Improvement in visual acuity with spectacles or contact lens correction, surgical procedure if any, and final visual acuity were analysed. RESULTS: In all, six patients were males and two were females. All cases except one were bilateral. The patients ranged in age from 18 to 48 years. All cases had isolated superior PMCD. One patient was a diagnosed case of vernal keratoconjunctivitis. The visual acuity at presentation ranged from hand motions to 20/25. The degree of thinning varied from 30 to 90%. The extent of thinning was commonly seen between the 10 and 2 o'clock positions. Ectasia was seen below the site of thinning in all the cases of superior PMCD. Topographic features including vertical corridor of reduced power, against-the-rule astigmatism and superior loop cylinder were seen in 10 eyes. Orbscan was carried out in two eyes of one patient and revealed an area of increased elevation in relation to the best-fit sphere superiorly corresponding to the area of ectasia in both the eyes. The visual acuity improved with rigid gas-permeable contact lens in six eyes and the final visual acuity ranged from 20/400 to 20/30. Two eyes were subjected to surgical intervention (peripheral annular graft=1 and lamellar graft=1). CONCLUSIONS: PMCD can occur superiorly. It should be considered in the differential diagnosis of superior ectatic disorders. The topographic findings, of reduced power in the vertical meridian and superior loop cylinder, are typical of superior pellucid marginal degeneration. Visual rehabilitation is usually possible with contact lenses, with surgical management required in selected cases.
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4/5. Penetrating keratoplasty in cicatrizing conjunctival diseases.

    PURPOSE: The outcome of successful penetrating keratoplasty (PK) typically is poor in eyes with end-stage chronic cicatrizing conjunctival diseases such as ocular cicatricial pemphigoid (OCP), stevens-johnson syndrome, and toxic epidermal necrolysis due to immunologically driven conjunctival inflammation associated with conjunctival cicatrization and lid abnormalities, severe dry eye, and extensive corneal neovascularization. The authors report the results of their experience with PK in 13 patients with OCP, stevens-johnson syndrome, and toxic epidermal necrolysis. methods: The authors reviewed the records of patients with OCP, stevens-johnson syndrome, or toxic epidermal necrolysis seen between 1976 and 1992. patients who underwent PK were examined for the purpose of this study. Initial and final visual acuity, indications for PK, surgical procedure, postoperative therapy, complications, total number of repeat PKs, length of follow-up, and the final outcome were recorded. RESULTS: Thirty-two PKs were performed in 16 eyes of 13 patients with advanced OCP (6 patients), OCP as a sequela of stevens-johnson syndrome (2 patients), stevens-johnson syndrome (3 patients), and toxic epidermal necrolysis (2 patients). The indications for the first PK were corneal perforation in six eyes (37.5%) and extensive corneal scarring in ten eyes (62.5%). Preoperative visual acuity was counting fingers in five eyes, hand motions in eight, and light perception in three. Preoperative therapy included systemic chemotherapy (8 patients), mucous membrane grafting (9 eyes), lamellar keratoplasty (2 eyes), superficial keratectomy (1 eye), and corneal dye laser photocoagulation (6 eyes). The mean follow-up period was 4.6 years (3 months-13 years). Eight eyes (50%) had clear grafts, and three eyes (18.7%) had 20/200 or better visual acuity at last visit. The major causes of graft failure were epithelial defect formation/persistence, stromal ulceration, perforation, and graft rejection. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that PK may be performed for tectonic reasons, but prospects for restoration of sight in patients with advanced cicatrizing conjunctival diseases, even after extensive preoperative medical and surgical therapy, are limited.
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5/5. Post-traumatic corneal mucormycosis caused by absidia corymbifera.

    OBJECTIVE: The purpose of the study was to report a case of mycotic keratitis caused by the organism absidia corymbifera (class Zygomycetes, order mucorales, family Mucoraceae). DESIGN: Case report. PARTICIPANT: A healthy 37-year-old farmer scratched his left cornea on a galvanized nail while working in his barn. Within 24 hours, an infiltrate in the interior cornea developed that advanced superiorly, reducing the vision to hand motion by the following day. He was treated with topical and systemic antibiotics and antifungal medications, but the infiltrate spread to the adjacent nasal limbus. INTERVENTION: An 11-mm penetrating keratoplasty was performed with an adjacent nasal 7-mm superficial lamellar sclerectomy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Pathologic examination of the keratoplasty specimen. RESULTS: Corneal cultures grew A. corymbifera. The organisms were identified in tissue sections by light, fluorescent, electron, and immunoelectron microscopy. CONCLUSIONS: The authors believe that this is the first reported case of keratitis caused by an absidia species and, as such, represents an unusual form of mucormycosis in an otherwise healthy individual.
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