# Infectious keratitis in pediatric population aged less than two years: a tertiary eye institute experience

**Authors:** Mohammad Soleimani, Seyed Mahbod Baharnoori, Sadegh Ghafarian, Mehrnaz Atighehchian, Kasra Cheraqpour, Seyed Ali Tabatabaei, Hamidreza Ghanbari, Mahdi Soleimanzadeh, Faezeh Moghimpour Bijani, Solmaz Almasi, Haniyeh Zeidabadinejad, Ali Davarpanah, Marzieh Sajedi, Bahram Bohrani Sefidan, Samer Habeel, Ahmad Masoumi, Mohammad Hossein Zamani, Ali R. Djalilian

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12348-024-00414-0 · Journal of Ophthalmic Inflammation and Infection · 2024-07-15

## TL;DR

This study examines infectious keratitis in children under two years old, highlighting risk factors, clinical features, and treatment outcomes.

## Contribution

The study provides a detailed analysis of pediatric infectious keratitis in children under two years, an under-researched age group.

## Key findings

- Predisposing factors included ocular trauma, surgery, and surface disease in 68.4% of cases.
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa was the most common microorganism isolated.
- Surgical intervention was required in 26.3% of cases due to corneal perforation.

## Abstract

Infectious keratitis is a serious ocular condition, which can lead to corneal scarring, vision loss, and even blindness. Pediatric infectious keratitis accounts for about 13% of all cases, although there is a lack of comprehensive data regarding keratitis in less than two years of age population group. This study was aimed to determine predisposing factors, clinical characteristics, microbial profile, and management of infectious keratitis in a population of children aged less than two years.

A retrospective study was carried out in a tertiary eye institute over a period of 18 years from July 2005 to December 2022. Collected data was analyzed for demographics, predisposing factors, clinical features, and treatment methods.

Fifty-seven cases of keratitis were identified. Age of the patients ranged from 1 to 24 months (Median: 6, interquartile range: 2–10). Thirty cases were male (52.6%). Predisposing factors were identified in 39 cases (68.4%): consisting of prior ocular trauma (n = 15), previous intraocular surgery (n = 11), ocular surface disease (n = 10), nasolacrimal duct obstruction (n = 4), prematurity (n = 3), developmental delay (n = 2), TORCH infection (n = 1), and contact lens (n = 1). Corneal thinning was observed in 29 eyes (50.9%), which progressed to perforation in 13 eyes (22.8%). Three patients developed endophthalmitis (95% CI, 1.5–13.4%). Most eyes had negative smear (60.4%) and culture (59.6%) results. Pseudomonas aeruginosa was the most common microorganism (11 of 21). Candida albicans was isolated in one case. In vitro susceptibility results showed good coverage of the combined ceftazidime and vancomycin regimen (100%). Surgical procedures were carried out in 35 eyes (61.4%) and 15 eyes required tectonic procedures (26.3%).

Despite good coverage of medical treatment over cultured isolates, surgical tectonic intervention was required in nearly a quarter of cases to resolve the corneal infection. This finding indicates the necessity of prompt patient referring, corneal sampling and initiation of the treatment.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** endophthalmitis (MONDO:0016047), TORCH infection (MONDO:0043275)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** corneal infection (MESH:D007239), Infectious keratitis (MESH:D003141), developmental delay (MESH:D002658), endophthalmitis (MESH:D009877), blindness (MESH:D001766), ocular condition (MESH:D020763), TORCH infection (MESH:C535607), vision loss (MESH:D014786), corneal scarring (MESH:D065306), keratitis (MESH:D007634), nasolacrimal duct obstruction (MESH:D007767), ocular trauma (MESH:D014947), ocular surface disease (MESH:D010534), Corneal thinning (MESH:D013851)
- **Chemicals:** vancomycin (MESH:D014640), ceftazidime (MESH:D002442)
- **Species:** Candida albicans (species) [taxon 5476], Pseudomonas aeruginosa (species) [taxon 287], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

28 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11250718/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11250718