The role of smears, cultures, and antibiotic sensitivity testing in the management of suspected infectious keratitis
- PMID: 8628555
- DOI: 10.1016/s0161-6420(96)30738-0
The role of smears, cultures, and antibiotic sensitivity testing in the management of suspected infectious keratitis
Abstract
Purpose: To examine the role of routine smears, cultures, and antibiotic sensitivity testing in the treatment of suspected infectious keratitis.
Methods: A retrospective chart and laboratory data review was performed for 81 consecutive patients seen in the Los Angeles County/University of Southern California Department of Ophthalmology between June 1991 and December 1993 with a primary diagnosis of community-acquired infectious keratitis. No patients were treated with antibiotics before evaluation in the author's department, and all underwent corneal scrapings for gram-stain and bacterial, fungal, and mycobacterium cultures. Ulcers were classified as moderate or severe. All initially were treated as inpatients with a regimen including fortified cefazolin and a fortified aminoglycoside.
Results: Of 81 patients, 74 ulcers were either culture- negative (n=18) or grew bacteria (n=56). Fungal infection was suggested in seven patients. Of the nonfungal ulcers, 33 were classified as moderate, and 41 as severe; all moderate ulcers improved without requiring a modification in antibiotic treatment, whereas 3 severe ulcers required a change in treatment.
Conclusion: Most community-acquired bacterial ulcers resolve with broad spectrum empiric therapy. Alternatives to universal culture and sensitivity testing that might be considered include selectively performing cultures for more severe or suspected non-bacterial ulcers or routinely obtaining cultures in all cases, but pursuing identification and sensitivity studies only when those data are required for therapy modification.
Comment in
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Microbiologic investigation of suspected microbial keratitis.Ophthalmology. 1996 Aug;103(8):1165-6. doi: 10.1016/s0161-6420(96)30528-9. Ophthalmology. 1996. PMID: 8764781 No abstract available.
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