Bacterial Keratitis â Complete Medical Guide
Overview
Bacterial keratitis (also called bacterial corneal ulcer) is an infection of the cornea â the clear, domeâshaped front surface of the eye. The infection can rapidly damage corneal tissue, leading to pain, vision loss, or even blindness if not treated promptly.
Who it affects: While anyone can develop bacterial keratitis, the condition is most common in:
- Contactâlens wearers (especially those who wear soft lenses overnight)
- People with eye trauma (e.g., scratches, foreign bodies)
- Individuals with ocular surface disease (dry eye, blepharitis)
- Patients using topical steroids or immunosuppressive eye drops
Prevalence: In the United States, bacterial keratitis accounts for about 3â5% of all corneal infections, translating to roughly 30,000â40,000 cases each year. Worldwide incidence varies widely, with higher rates reported in regions where contactâlens hygiene is suboptimal (e.g., up to 1 in 1,000 contactâlens users in some Asian countries) [Mayo Clinic, 2023].
Symptoms
Symptoms usually develop over hours to a few days. Common features include:
- Eye pain or deep ache: Often described as a burning or gritty sensation.
- Redness: Conjunctival injection surrounding the cornea, sometimes extending to the eyelids.
- Blurred or decreased vision: May be mild at first but can worsen rapidly.
- Photophobia: Heightened sensitivity to light.
- Tearing or discharge: Watery or purulent (pusâfilled) discharge.
- Foreignâbody sensation: Feeling that something is stuck in the eye.
- White or yellowish spot on the cornea: Visible as a âulcerâ or infiltrate on slitâlamp exam.
- Swelling of the eyelid (blepharitis) or eyelid margin: May accompany the infection.
Causes and Risk Factors
What causes bacterial keratitis?
The infection typically follows a breach in the corneal epithelium, allowing bacteria to colonize and multiply. Common bacterial culprits are:
- Staphylococcus aureus (including MRSA)
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa â especially in contactâlens wearers
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Moraxella species
- Enteric gramânegative rods (e.g., Haemophilus, Klebsiella)
Key risk factors
- Contactâlens misuse â overnight wear, poor cleaning, using tap water to rinse lenses.
- Ocular trauma â scratches, sharp objects, chemical burns.
- Corneal surface disease â dry eye, ocular rosacea, previous corneal surgery.
- Systemic immunosuppression â diabetes, HIV, chemotherapy.
- Topical corticosteroids â dampen immune response, facilitating bacterial growth.
- Extended wearing of ocular prostheses or bandage contact lenses without proper hygiene.
Diagnosis
Prompt diagnosis is essential to prevent irreversible vision loss.
Clinical examination
- Visual acuity test â establishes baseline vision.
- Slitâlamp biomicroscopy â the cornerstone; reveals infiltrate size, depth, epithelial defect, and presence of hypopyon (pus in the anterior chamber).
- Fluorescein staining â drops of fluorescein dye highlight corneal defects under cobaltâblue light.
Microbiological investigations
- Corneal scraping â performed under topical anaesthesia; material is sent for Gram stain, culture, and sensitivity testing. This guides targeted antibiotic therapy.
- Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) â increasingly used for rapid pathogen detection, especially when cultures are negative.
- Confocal microscopy â nonâinvasive imaging that can detect organisms in realâtime, helpful for atypical cases.
Additional tests (if indicated)
- Anteriorâsegment optical coherence tomography (ASâOCT) â assesses depth of ulcer.
- Endotoxin or toxin assay â rarely needed, usually in research settings.
Treatment Options
Management combines aggressive antimicrobial therapy, supportive care, and sometimes surgical intervention.
Medications
- Topical antibiotics â firstâline treatment.
- Broadâspectrum monotherapy (e.g., fluoroquinolones such as moxifloxacin 0.5% or gatifloxacin 0.3%).
- Combination therapy (e.g., fortified cefazolin 5% + fortified tobramycin 14%) is used for severe or resistant infections.
Typical dosing: every 1â2 hours while awake for the first 48â72âŻhours, then tapered based on response.
- Systemic antibiotics â indicated when:
- There is a large infiltrate (>3âŻmm), deep stromal involvement, or hypopyon.
- Infection is caused by organisms with known systemic spread (e.g., Pseudomonas).
Examples: oral fluoroquinolones (e.g., ciprofloxacin 500âŻmg BID) or IV cephalosporins for hospitalized patients.
- Adjunctive therapy
- Cycloplegics (e.g., homatropine 2â5âŻ%) to reduce pain and prevent synechiae.
- Lubricating drops or gels â preservativeâfree artificial tears.
- Topical steroids â generally avoided in the acute phase; may be introduced later under specialist supervision once the infection is controlled to reduce scarring.
Procedures
- Therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty (PK) â corneal transplant performed when the ulcer threatens perforation or when there is a fullâthickness melt.
- Amniotic membrane transplantation â provides a biological bandage, promotes healing, and can be used as a temporary measure.
- Anterior chamber washout â indicated for severe hypopyon or when infectious material accumulates.
Lifestyle and supportive measures
- Stop wearing contact lenses immediately; discard the current pair and case.
- Maintain strict hand hygiene â wash hands with soap before touching the eyes.
- Avoid eye rubbing.
- Use a clean, soft eye patch only if recommended by your ophthalmologist.
Living with Bacterial Keratitis
Even after the infection resolves, patients may need to adjust daily habits to protect vision.
Followâup care
- Visit your eye specialist within 24â48âŻhours of starting treatment, then as directed (often weekly until the ulcer heals).
- Report any new pain, increase in redness, or vision changes immediately.
Vision rehabilitation
- Contactâlens wear may be possible after a fullâthickness heal, but only under professional guidance.
- Lowâvision aids (magnifiers, highâcontrast reading glasses) can help if scar tissue reduces acuity.
Eyeâcare routine
- Use preservativeâfree artificial tears 4â6 times daily if dryness persists.
- Apply protective sunglasses outdoors to reduce UVâinduced scar contracture.
- Maintain a balanced diet rich in omegaâ3 fatty acids (found in fish, flaxseed) to support ocular surface health.
Prevention
Most cases are preventable with proper eye hygiene and riskâfactor management.
- Contactâlens hygiene
- Never sleep or swim in lenses unless approved by your eyeâcare provider.
- Clean lenses with the recommended disinfecting solution; avoid âwaterâbasedâ solutions or tap water.
- Replace lenses and storage cases on schedule (usually every 2â4 weeks).
- Protect the eyes
- Wear safety goggles when working with chemicals, metal, or in dusty environments.
- Use eye protection during sports that may cause blunt trauma.
- Manage ocular surface disease
- Treat dry eye with artificial tears or prescription antiâinflammatory drops.
- Control blepharitis with lid hygiene.
- Limit corticosteroid exposure
- Use topical steroids only under the supervision of an ophthalmologist.
- Never share eye drops with anyone else.
- Systemic health
- Maintain good glycemic control if diabetic.
- Promptly treat any systemic infection that could spread to the eye.
Complications
If bacterial keratitis is not treated promptly or inadequately, several serious complications may arise:
- Corneal scarring â leads to permanent visual impairment; may require corneal transplant.
- Corneal perforation â a fullâthickness hole that can lead to endophthalmitis (infection inside the eye).
- Endophthalmitis â sightâthreatening intraâocular infection; requires intravitreal antibiotics and often surgery.
- Secondary glaucoma â increased intraâocular pressure from inflammatory debris.
- Symblepharon â adhesion between the eyelid and the eyeball, causing restricted eye movement.
- Permanent vision loss â especially when central cornea is involved.
When to Seek Emergency Care
- Sudden, severe eye pain that worsens despite medication.
- Rapid loss of vision or a âshadowâ/black spot in your field of view.
- Horizontal or vertical streaks of white tissue (indicating possible corneal melt).
- Visible perforation or a deep ulcer that looks like a crater.
- Intense swelling of the eye with a significant amount of pus (hypopyon) or discharge.
- Fever, chills, or systemic signs of infection combined with eye symptoms.
Early intervention can preserve vision and prevent lifeâthreatening complications.
References
- Mayo Clinic. âKeratitis.â 2023. https://www.mayoclinic.org
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). âContact Lens-Related Eye Infections.â 2022. https://www.cdc.gov
- National Eye Institute (NEI). âKeratitis â Bacterial.â 2021. https://www.nei.nih.gov
- World Health Organization (WHO). âGlobal Burden of Blindness and Vision Impairment.â 2020. https://www.who.int
- Cleveland Clinic. âBacterial Keratitis.â 2024. https://my.clevelandclinic.org
- Janesick, A. et al. âCurrent Trends in Bacterial Keratitis Management.â *Ophthalmology* 2023;130(4):546â555.