0521779407-C03 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 20:54
Corneal Ulcer 405
■No eye patch for corneal ulcers
■Eye shield may be used if significant corneal thinning
■Topical cycloplegics (scopolamine^1 / 4 %) for comfort
specific therapy
Indications
■Suspicion of bacterial corneal ulcer requires prompt treatment
pending culture results
Treatment Options
■Corneal ulcers treated as bacterial unless high suspicion of other
cause
■Initial treatment depends on size, location, severity of ulceration:
➣Small, peripheral, & nonvision-threatening infiltrates: topical
quinolones – ofloxacin 0.3%, ciprofloxacin 0.3%, or levofloxacin
0.5% 2 drops q 15 min for 2 hours, then q 1 hour around the
clock
➣Large, central, & vision-threatening infiltrates: fortified topical
antibiotics (must be compounded by pharmacy) – cefazolin &
tobramycin; consider subconjunctival injection of antibiotics
in addition to topicals in most severe infections, when fortified
topical antibiotics not available in short time, or pt compliance
concerns
■Subsequent treatment adjusted by culture & sensitivity results
■Corneal ulcers dues to nonbacterial causes (fungal, herpes simplex
virus, or acanthamoeba) as indicted by stains or cultures require
specific treatment directed at organism
Side Effects & Contraindications
■Side effects: pain/stinging on drop instillation, toxicity to corneal
epithelium, conjunctival sloughing may occur after subconjunctival
injection
■Contraindications:
➣Allergy to above antibiotics:
Cefazolin allergy: vancomycin
Tobramycin allergy: ceftazidime
follow-up
During Treatment
■Initially, daily; assess improvement in infiltrate size & density, size of
epithelial defect, follow for corneal thinning