Periocular Vitiligo in Keratoconus: A Case Report and Literature Review
Saeed Azizi, Omer Jamall, Zakariya Jarrar, Daniel Gore, Oliver Findl

TL;DR
A young man with periocular vitiligo developed keratoconus after using pimecrolimus, which caused eye irritation and led to eye rubbing.
Contribution
This is the first case report linking periocular creams with keratoconus via irritation-induced eye rubbing.
Findings
Pimecrolimus-induced irritation led to unilateral eye rubbing and keratoconus in a young patient.
Periocular drug-induced irritation may be a modifiable risk factor for corneal ectatic disorders.
The case suggests a multifactorial mechanism involving mechanical stress and inflammation in keratoconus progression.
Abstract
A 21-year-old Asian man developed asymmetrical keratoconus (OD > OS) in the context of right-sided periocular vitiligo. The patient was undergoing topical pimecrolimus treatment for his vitiligo, which caused periocular eye irritation, leading to aggressive, unilateral right-eye rubbing. Subsequently, he developed ocular symptoms such as eye strain-related headaches, aggravated by screen use. There was no relevant past medical history or family history of ocular disease. Corneal topography and keratography confirmed the diagnosis of keratoconus. The patient underwent femtosecond laser-assisted deep anterior lamellar keratoplasty (DALK) in the right eye and corneal cross-linking in the left eye to prevent progression. This case highlights a previously unreported association between periocular vitiligo, pimecrolimus-induced irritation, and subsequent keratoconus. The pathophysiological…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCorneal surgery and disorders · Ocular Surface and Contact Lens · Corneal Surgery and Treatments
