First report of rare fungal keratitis: Diaporthe aspalathi
Dan Huang, Yanan Huo, Qi Dai, Xiaoyi Qin, Danyan Luo, Huiqin Wang

TL;DR
A rare case of eye infection caused by the plant fungus Diaporthe aspalathi is reported in a 50-year-old woman.
Contribution
First documented case of human keratitis caused by Diaporthe aspalathi.
Findings
Diaporthe aspalathi was identified as the cause of corneal infection through DNA sequencing.
The patient required antifungal treatment and surgery, resulting in corneal scarring and vascularization.
Abstract
The plant fungal pathogen Diaporthe aspalathi is the causal agent of the southern stem canker disease in soybean. However, human infection caused by D. aspalathi has not been previously reported. We report a case of human keratitis caused by D. aspalathi on a 50-year-old woman. She presented to the hospital with redness, pain, decreased vision, and a focal white opacity in the left eye, which had been injured by a thorn 3.5 months earlier. Slit lamp examination revealed moderate conjunctival hyperemia, intact corneal epithelium, mild stromal edema, and thick white endothelial exudates in the inferior cornea. D. aspalathi was identified through DNA sequencing. The patient was treated with a combination of antifungal agents and therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty, resulting in scarring and vascularization of the graft. Our report shows a rare case of corneal infection caused by D.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOcular Infections and Treatments · Nail Diseases and Treatments · Fungal Infections and Studies
