Keratitis Bullosa â A Comprehensive Medical Guide
Overview
Keratitis bullosa (also called bullous keratopathy or bullous corneal ulcer) is an inflammatory eye disorder characterized by the formation of fluidâfilled blisters (bullae) on the corneal surface. The condition can arise from infection, autoimmune disease, trauma, or exposure to certain chemicals or medications. When the epithelial layer of the cornea is compromised, tears cannot glide smoothly, leading to painful swelling and, if untreated, scarring that threatens vision.
The disease can affect anyone but is most common in:
- Adults aged 20â60, especially those with a history of ocular surgery or contactâlens wear.
- Patients with systemic autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, or StevensâJohnson syndrome.
- Individuals living in regions with limited access to clean water or proper eye protection (e.g., agricultural workers).
Exact prevalence is difficult to determine because bullous keratopathy is often reported as a complication of other eye conditions. In the United States, corneal ulcerations (the broader category that includes bullous keratopathy) affect roughly 1.5â2.0 per 10,000 people each year, with bullous forms comprising an estimated 10â15âŻ% of those cases [1]. Worldwide, the burden is higher in lowâincome countries where infectious keratitis is more common.
Symptoms
Symptoms may develop gradually over days or appear suddenly after an insult to the eye. The hallmark is the presence of âbullaeâ â tiny, fluidâfilled blisters on the cornea. Common signs and symptoms include:
- Redness (hyperemia): The white part of the eye looks pink or violet.
- Severe pain or burning sensation: Often described as gritty, as if sand is in the eye.
- Photophobia: Heightened sensitivity to light.
- Blurred or decreased vision: Vision may fluctuate with blinking.
- Tearing (epiphora): Excessive watery discharge.
- Foreignâbody sensation: The feeling that something is stuck in the eye.
- Visible corneal bullae: Tiny translucent vesicles seen with a slitâlamp exam; they may coalesce into larger blisters that can rupture.
- Sticky eyelids: When bullae rupture, the exposed corneal surface adheres to the eyelid, causing further pain.
- Discharge: In infectious cases, a purulent (pusâfilled) discharge may be present.
- Eye swelling (periorbital edema): In severe inflammation, the tissues around the eye may become swollen.
Causes and Risk Factors
Keratitis bullosa is not a single disease; it is a manifestation of several underlying insults to the cornea. The most common causes are:
Infectious agents
- Bacterial: Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, and Streptococcus pneumoniae.
- Fungal: Fusarium, Aspergillus, and Candida species.
- Acanthamoeba: Often linked to poor contactâlens hygiene.
- Viral: Herpes simplex virus (HSV) and varicellaâzoster virus (VZV) can produce dendritic ulcers that later become bullous.
Nonâinfectious triggers
- Autoimmune diseases: Rheumatoid arthritis, pemphigoid, ocular cicatricial pemphigoid.
- Chemical burns: Alkali or acid exposure.
- Trauma: Corneal abrasions, foreign bodies.
- Medications: Topical nonâsteroidal antiâinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), longâterm topical steroids, or preservatives in eye drops.
- Surgical complications: Endothelial cell loss after cataract surgery or corneal transplant can lead to chronic edema and bullae formation.
Risk factors
- Contactâlens wear, especially overnight extended wear.
- Dry eye disease or insufficient tear film.
- Immunosuppression (e.g., diabetes, HIV, systemic steroids).
- Previous corneal surgery.
- Occupational exposure to dust, chemicals, or organic matter.
Diagnosis
Prompt, accurate diagnosis is essential to prevent permanent corneal scarring. Diagnosis combines a detailed history, a thorough eye examination, and targeted laboratory testing.
Clinical evaluation
- History taking: Onset, exposure risks (contact lenses, trauma), systemic illnesses, medication use.
- Visual acuity test: Determines the impact on sight.
- Slitâlamp microscopy: Goldâstandard for visualizing corneal bullae, epithelial defects, stromal infiltrates, and hypopyon (pus in the anterior chamber).
- Fluorescein staining: Highlights epithelial breakdown; bullae appear as dark âdropletsâ surrounded by bright green staining.
- Intraâocular pressure (IOP) measurement: Elevated pressure can coexist in severe inflammation.
Laboratory tests
- Corneal scrapings: Obtained with a sterile blade and cultured on bacterial, fungal, and Acanthamoeba media.
- Polymerase chain reaction (PCR): Detects viral DNA (HSV, VZV) quickly.
- Serology: When autoimmune disease is suspected (e.g., ANA, rheumatoid factor).
Imaging
- Anterior segment optical coherence tomography (ASâOCT): Provides crossâsectional images of bullae depth.
- Confocal microscopy: Allows inâvivo visualization of pathogens, especially Acanthamoeba cysts.
Treatment Options
Treatment is tailored to the underlying cause and the severity of the bullae. Goals are to eradicate infection (if present), control inflammation, promote epithelial healing, and protect the cornea from further damage.
Medicationâbased therapies
- Antibiotics: Broadâspectrum topical drops (e.g., moxifloxacin, tobramycin) until culture results guide targeted therapy.
- Antifungals: Natamycin 5âŻ% suspension or voriconazole eye drops for fungal isolates.
- Antivirals: Topical trifluridine or oral acyclovir for HSV; oral valacyclovir for VZV.
- Acanthamoeba agents: Combination of chlorhexidine 0.02âŻ% and polyhexamethylene biguanide (PHMB) 0.02âŻ%.
- Corticosteroids: Used cautiously after infection control; prednisolone acetate 1âŻ% to dampen immuneâmediated inflammation.
- Cyclosporine or lifitegrast: For severe dry eye contributing to epithelial breakdown.
Procedural interventions
- Debridement: Mechanical removal of loose epithelium and bullae under aseptic conditions to allow medication penetration.
- Bandage contact lens (BCL): Silicone hydrogel lenses protect the cornea, reduce pain, and promote reâepithelialization.
- Amniotic membrane transplantation (AMT): Provides a biologic scaffold, reduces inflammation, and accelerates healing in refractory cases.
- Therapeutic keratoplasty: Partial or fullâthickness corneal transplant when scarring threatens vision.
- Phototherapeutic keratectomy (PTK): Excimer laser removal of superficial opacities and bullae.
Lifestyle & supportive measures
- Artificial tears (preservativeâfree) every 2â4âŻhours.
- Warm compresses 5âŻminutes, 3â4 times daily to improve tear film.
- Stop contactâlens wear until the cornea fully heals.
- Protect the eye with sunglasses outdoors to reduce UVâinduced inflammation.
Living with Keratitis Bullosa
Even after the acute episode resolves, patients may need ongoing care to prevent recurrence and preserve vision.
- Adhere to medication schedules: Missing doses can allow infection to flare.
- Maintain eyelid hygiene: Warm lid scrubs reduce bacterial load.
- Use preservativeâfree lubricants: Preservatives can irritate a healing cornea.
- Follow up regularly: At least every 1â2âŻweeks initially; later, every 3â6âŻmonths or as directed.
- Monitor vision changes: Any new blurring, floaters, or light flashes warrants prompt evaluation.
- Protect the eye during activities: Safety goggles for sports, gardening, or work with chemicals.
- Nutrition: Adequate omegaâ3 fatty acids (e.g., fish oil) support tear quality.
- Manage systemic disease: Keep rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, or other conditions wellâcontrolled with your primary physician.
Prevention
Many cases of keratitis bullosa are preventable with simple habits:
- Proper contactâlens care: Wash hands, use recommended solutions, replace lenses as scheduled, and avoid overnight wear unless approved.
- Eye protection: Wear goggles in dusty, windy, or chemical environments.
- Prompt treatment of minor corneal abrasions: Even tiny scratches can become portals for infection.
- Control dry eye: Use humidifiers, lubricating drops, and treat meibomian gland dysfunction.
- Vaccination: Varicella and herpes zoster vaccines reduce the risk of viral keratitis.
- Regular eye exams: Early detection of ocular surface disease allows interventions before bullae form.
Complications
If left untreated or inadequately managed, keratitis bullosa can lead to serious sequelae:
- Corneal scarring (stromal opacity): Permanent visual impairment.
- Corneal neovascularization: New blood vessels reduce corneal clarity.
- Persistent epithelial defects: Chronic pain and risk of infection.
- Endophthalmitis: Extension of infection into the interior of the eye â a sightâthreatening emergency.
- Glaucoma: Inflammation can raise intraâocular pressure.
- Loss of vision: In severe cases, vision may deteriorate to legal blindness.
When to Seek Emergency Care
- Sudden, severe eye pain that does not improve with painârelief drops.
- Rapidly worsening vision or sudden loss of vision.
- Visible rupture of corneal bullae with a white or yellow discharge.
- Redness spreading to the surrounding eyelid or face (possible cellulitis).
- Sensitivity to light that becomes intolerable.
- Feeling of a foreign body âstuckâ that cannot be removed.
- Fever or systemic symptoms suggestive of spreading infection.
Call emergency services (e.g., 911 in the U.S.) or go to the nearest emergency department / ophthalmology urgentâcare clinic right away.
**References**
- American Academy of Ophthalmology. âCorneal Ulcer.â AAO, 2023. https://www.aao.org/eye-health/diseases/corneal-ulcer
- Mayo Clinic. âKeratitis.â Mayo Clinic, 2022. https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/keratitis
- World Health Organization. âPrevention of Blindness from Corneal Opacities.â WHO, 2021.
- Cleveland Clinic. âContact LensâRelated Eye Infections.â Cleveland Clinic, 2024.
- National Eye Institute (NEI). âCorneal Disease: Facts and Statistics.â NIH, 2023.