Therapeutic Penetrating Keratoplasty in a Case of Corneal Perforation Caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides Infection.
Kazuki ImaiTakayoshi SumiokaHiroki IwanishiYukihisa TakadaShin'ichi MurataRyuta IwamotoYuka OkadaShizuya SaikaPublished in: Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Background : Corneal infection of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides is uncommon and usually limited to the anterior stroma. However, we observed a case of corneal stromal perforation caused by this fungus under a compromised condition. Case : A 73-year-old woman consulted us with a severe corneal ulceration. She was a tangerine orange farmer who suffered from rheumatoid arthritis for more than ten years. Before consultation with us, she received pterygium excision in her right eye. She then developed a corneal ulceration and received topical glucocorticoid therapy upon diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis-related stromal ulcer in the eye. At the first consultation with us, a corneal ulceration was observed in the inferotemporal area of her right cornea. Biological examination detected a filamentous fungus, Colletotrichum gloeosporioides . Topical and systemic antifungal treatments were not significantly effective. Fourteen days after consultation, the lesion grew worse, leading to stromal perforation, which was treated by therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty using a preserved corneal button. Conclusions : Topical glucocorticoid could accelerate the growth of Colletotrichum gloeosporioides before diagnosis, even though the primary cause of corneal ulceration development might be rheumatoid arthritis.