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. 2008 Apr;100(4):386-90.
doi: 10.1016/s0027-9684(15)31270-0.

Keratitis in children as seen in a tertiary hospital in Africa

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Keratitis in children as seen in a tertiary hospital in Africa

Adeyinka Ashaye et al. J Natl Med Assoc. 2008 Apr.

Abstract

Background: Blindness studies have shown that keratitis complicated by the use of traditional eye medications is a major factor of childhood blindness in developing countries. Most cases of such keratitis were presumably due to nutritional causes or bacterial infection. The patterns of outcome that are seen in hospitals may be different.

Objective: To determine the clinical types of keratitis seen in children at a tertiary hospital and compare with other reports.

Method: A retrospective analysis was conducted using the records of children who presented with keratitis to the eye unit of the University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria, over a three-year period from January 2003 to December 2005. Information obtained were the demographic data, the etiological type of keratitis and visual outcome of management.

Result: Ninety-five patients with keratitis seen during this three-year period were children. Of these, 47 (49.5%) patients had presumed herpes simplex keratitis; 78.9% of children with herpes simplex keratitis presented with combined epithelial and stromal disease; 21 (22.1%) had keratitis that was associated with a recent measles infection and protein calorie malnutrition. Fifteen (15.8%) had keratitis associated with phlyctenular keratoconjunctivitis, eight (8.4%) patients had bacterial/fungal keratitis, while four (4.2%) had vernal ulcers. Both the right and left eyes were affected in 47.6% and 52.4% of cases, respectively. Bilateral keratitis occurred in eight of the children with measles, and six patients with herpes simplex keratitis. Fifty-nine eyes had visual acuity recorded after the keratitis healed. Of these, the visual outcome was very poor in six (20.0%) eyes with herpes simplex keratitis and eight (100%) eyes with bacterial/fungal keratitis. All eyes with suppurative keratitis associated with measles developed dense corneal scars or were perforated.

Conclusion: Herpes simplex keratitis was the leading cause of keratitis in children seen at this tertiary hospital, and clinical presentations do not differ from those reported in other populations. Very poor visual outcome was associated with all types of keratitis except those with herpes keratitis. Blindness studies may underrepresent the burden of herpes simplex keratitis in the location of this study.

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