Abstract

Infectious keratitis causes significant, financial burden and is only increasing in frequency with contact lens use. Despite this, no retrospective studies, prospective studies, or clinical trials have evaluated the diagnostic validity of clinical guidelines in cases of infectious keratitis. Currently, standard of care recommends that corneal samples be obtained for staining and culturing in select patients showing evidence of corneal ulceration. Ideally, diagnostic information from corneal sampling is thought to help guide therapeutic interventions, prevent disease progression, reduce antibiotic resistance, and decrease overall expenditures for the management and treatment of infectious keratitis. However, current staining and culturing methods are limited by poor sensitivity in non-bacterial cases (i.e. fungal, viral) and lengthy turnaround times, and these methods do not frequently change clinical decision making. Newer fluoroquinolones and broad-spectrum antibiotics resolve the vast majority of cases of infectious keratitis, rendering cultures less essential for management. We studied the clinical utility of obtaining corneal samples for culturing and staining and the need for future research to establish superior diagnostic guidelines for their use in infectious keratitis.

Details

Title
Biological Staining and Culturing in Infectious Keratitis: Controversy in Clinical Utility
Author
Moshirfar, Majid; Hopping, Grant C; Vaidyanathan, Uma; Liu, Harry; Somani, A Nicole; Ronquillo, Yasmyne C; Hoopes, Phillip C
Pages
145-151
Publication year
2019
Publication date
Autumn 2019
Publisher
International Virtual Ophthalmic Research Center (IVORC)
ISSN
23224436
e-ISSN
23223219
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2299138925
Copyright
© 2019. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.