The most important clinical features of canaliculitis include a red, swollen eyelid in the area of the affected canaliculus, a unilateral conjunctivitis, a mucopurulent discharge and in some cases dacryoliths visible in the lacrimal punctum. Conservative therapy was found to be little effective: only 10% of the patients could be cured, 40% showed a recurrence after conservative treatment. 20 patients (50%) were treated by canaliculotomy: 16 of these were cured by this surgical treatment, 4 patients complained of epiphora, although diagnostic syringing showed free lacrimal pathways. The surgical treatment of canaliculitis in combination with conservative therapy yields far better results than conservative therapy alone.
The dacryocystitis in adults is mainly caused by postsaccal stenosis of the lacrimal ducts. The banking up of the lacrimal fluid leads to an accumulation of germs and following infection. This report describes the clinical and microbiological findings in a large consecutive series of patients that presented at the outpatient clinic of the 2nd Department of Ophthalmology of the University of Vienna with the signs of acute, chronic recurrent or chronic infections of the lacrimal system between 1983 and the end of 1990. Within the bacterial genus Staphylococci (S. aureus, S. epidermidis and S. saprophyticus) were the most frequently isolated organisms (74 cultures = 50% out of samples with positive cultures). It was quite interesting that a significant number of gram-negative rods (37 = 25.5%) could be isolated. Of these microorganisms Escherichia coli was most frequently growing on special media (17 cases = 11.7%) when cultures were obtained from acute inflamed lacrimal sacs of patients who suffered from chronic recurrent infections. Conservative therapy of purulent dacryocystitis constitutes the last possible preparation for a necessary surgical intervention and therefore the authors want to point out the importance of microbiological examinations so as to optimize antibiotic therapy.
Background: The permanent change of resistance patterns of bacteria causing ocular infections makes repeat susceptibility testings against the most recent clinical isolates mandatory. The aim of the present study was to assess the in vitro susceptibility of ocular bacterial isolates of clinically symptomatic eyes admitted to the outpatient clinic of the eye department of a large central hospital to commonly used topical antibiotics. Methods: Ocular isolates (n = 454) were tested for their susceptibility to ofloxacin, ciprofloxacin, norfloxacin, gentamicin, tobramycin, meomycin, bacitracin, erythromycin, tetracycline and chloramphenicol. Results: All three tested fluoroquinolones were found to be very effective against gram-negative organisms but demonstrated some weakness against certain strains of gram-positive germs, in particular coagulase-negative staphylococci and Streptococcus viridans. These germs, however, were very susceptible to bacitracin and chloramphenicol. The relative overall in vitro efficacy was (in decreasing order): chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin, norfloxacin, bacitracin, tetracycline, neomycin, erythromycin, tobramycin and gentamicin. Conclusion: Chloramphenicol had the highest overall in vitro efficacy, but has potential lethal side effects. The fluoroquinolones were highly effective, especially being superior to the aminoglycosides tested, but no single antibiotic provided 100% coverage against all of the bacterial isolates that were tested.
Postoperative endophthalmitis remains one of the most devastating complications of eye surgery. In recent years infections with so called ‘nonpathogenic’ organisms like Propionibacteriumacnes or coagulase-negative staphylococci have gained in importance. 200 patients were included in this study, from whom preoperative smears of the conjunctiva and intraoperative aspirates of the anterior chamber (at the start and at the end of the operation) had been taken. All samples were investigated for aerobe and anaerobe microorganisms and fungi. 75% of the preoperative smears had been contaminated, with coagulase-negative staphylococci the most commonly isolated bacteria. But, in addition, 28% of the patients had culture-positive anterior chamber aspirates, also with coagulase-negative staphylococci as the most frequent organisms. In all cases inoculum sizes were extremly small (10–20 c.f.u./ml). Probably because of this small inoculum, but also due to the bacteriocidal qualities of the acqueous humor and the integrity of the posterior capsule sac, in no case had postoperative endophthalmitis developed. For the first time, our study tried to correlate the contamination of the anterior chamber aspirate to the used operation technique: first results show that the contamination of the aqueous humor is significantly lower (p < 0.03) if the cataract extraction is performed by phacoemulsification than if done without.
Over the last few years the number of patients with chronic bilateral blepharitis has increased dramatically. From January 1985 until the end of 1989, a total of 407 patients with this diagnosis underwent ophthalmological and dermatological investigations at our out-patient clinic. Keratoconjunctivitis sicca (KCS) in conjunction with blepharitis occurred in 14.5% of the patient population who also suffered from acne rosacea. A comparison of the spectrum of microorganisms that have previously been isolated from affected sites with data obtained in the present study revealed that the range of microorganisms associated with this chronic localized inflammation has apparently shifted in recent years. The prevalence of Staphylococcus aureus, which was considerable in the pre-antibiotic era, has markedly decreased, although a distinct entity of staphylococcal blepharitis seems to remain, either alone or in combination with seborrheic blepharitis (62.8% of our patients). The clinical picture, microbiological findings and therapy for this condition are presented.
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