Suscribirse

Relationship Between Climate, Disease Severity, and Causative Organism for Contact Lens–Associated Microbial Keratitis in Australia - 22/08/11

Doi : 10.1016/j.ajo.2007.06.037 
Fiona Stapleton a, b, c, , Lisa J. Keay b, c, Paul G. Sanfilippo b, Suchi Katiyar b, c, Katie P. Edwards b, c, Thomas Naduvilath a
a Institute for Eye Research, University of New South Wales, Australia 
b School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of New South Wales, Australia 
c Vision Cooperative Research Centre, Sydney, Australia. 

Inquiries to Fiona Stapleton, School of Optometry and Vision Science and Vision CRC, Level 3, North Wing, Rupert Myers Building Gate 14, Barker Street, University of New South Wales, Sydney, 2052, New South Wales, Australia

Resumen

Purpose

To evaluate associations between disease severity, causative organism, and climatic variation in contact lens-related microbial keratitis in Australia.

Design

Prospective, observational case series.

Methods

Contact lens wearing patients (n = 236) with presumed microbial keratitis presenting to private and hospital ophthalmologists in Australia between October 1, 2003 and September 30, 2004 were identified prospectively. Clinical details, management information, and microbiology data were collected and cases were graded for severity based on lesion size and location criteria. Causative organisms were assigned to “environmental” or “endogenous” groups. Climate zone and daytime temperature and humidity were determined for the geographic location of each event. The main outcome measures were disease severity, causative organism, and climate zone.

Results

Severe contact lens-related microbial keratitis was more likely to occur in warmer, humid regions of the country (P < .001), compared with smaller, increasingly peripheral corneal lesions that were more common in cooler conditions (P < .001). Culture-proven keratitis was predominantly caused by environmental organisms with Pseudomonas aeruginosa being recovered most frequently. Environmental organisms were isolated more commonly from tropical regions of the country and also accounted for nearly all cases of vision loss that occurred during the study period. Humidity did not have a significant effect on causative organism.

Conclusions

Climatic conditions play a role in disease severity and causative organism in contact lens-related microbial keratitis and therefore have implications for practitioners involved in contact lens care and contact lens wearers who live in or travel to the tropics.

El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.

Esquema


© 2007  Elsevier Inc. Reservados todos los derechos.
Añadir a mi biblioteca Eliminar de mi biblioteca Imprimir
Exportación

    Exportación citas

  • Fichero

  • Contenido

Vol 144 - N° 5

P. 690 - novembre 2007 Regresar al número
Artículo precedente Artículo precedente
  • Reporting Visual Acuities
| Artículo siguiente Artículo siguiente
  • Histopathologic and Immunologic Aspects of AlphaCor Artificial Corneal Failure
  • Marco Coassin, Cheng Zhang, W. Richard Green, James V. Aquavella, Esen K. Akpek

Bienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
El acceso al texto completo de este artículo requiere una suscripción.

¿Ya suscrito a @@106933@@ revista ?

@@150455@@ Voir plus

Mi cuenta


Declaración CNIL

EM-CONSULTE.COM se declara a la CNIL, la declaración N º 1286925.

En virtud de la Ley N º 78-17 del 6 de enero de 1978, relativa a las computadoras, archivos y libertades, usted tiene el derecho de oposición (art.26 de la ley), el acceso (art.34 a 38 Ley), y correcta (artículo 36 de la ley) los datos que le conciernen. Por lo tanto, usted puede pedir que se corrija, complementado, clarificado, actualizado o suprimido información sobre usted que son inexactos, incompletos, engañosos, obsoletos o cuya recogida o de conservación o uso está prohibido.
La información personal sobre los visitantes de nuestro sitio, incluyendo su identidad, son confidenciales.
El jefe del sitio en el honor se compromete a respetar la confidencialidad de los requisitos legales aplicables en Francia y no de revelar dicha información a terceros.


Todo el contenido en este sitio: Copyright © 2026 Elsevier, sus licenciantes y colaboradores. Se reservan todos los derechos, incluidos los de minería de texto y datos, entrenamiento de IA y tecnologías similares. Para todo el contenido de acceso abierto, se aplican los términos de licencia de Creative Commons.