Ocular leishmaniasis, a rare form of vector-borne parasitic infection, can affect the adnexa, retina, uvea, and cornea. Coinfection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and Leishmania may be a distinct clinical entity as the pathogens act synergistically, enhancing each other's pathogenicity, and leading to more severe forms of the disease. Ocular leishmaniasis in the setting of HIV coinfection most commonly causes anterior granulomatous uveitis, for which the etiology can be either active ocular infection or posttreatment inflammatory phenomenon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: This study evaluated the safety and efficacy of Bowman's membrane electrocautery in blind painful eyes with bullous keratopathy not amenable to corneal transplantation.
Methods: Eleven eyes of 11 subjects with painful bullous keratopathy and poor visual potential who underwent electrocautery of Bowman's membrane at a tertiary referral ophthalmology clinic were reviewed retrospectively. Subject demographics and preoperative and postoperative data were collected, including description of pain, slit lamp biomicroscopy, best corrected visual acuity, topical medication use, and complications.
The corneal epithelium serves as a physical barrier and a refractive element. Therefore, diseases of the corneal epithelium can increase the risk for infection and causes vision loss. The corneal epithelium can be affected by a multitude of conditions, such as infections, hereditary diseases, depositions, trauma, autoimmune conditions, factitious disorders, and iatrogenic causes.
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