Basics of Bacterial Keratitis

Bacterial keratitis is an infection of the cornea (the clear dome covering the colored part of the eye) that is caused by bacteria. It can affect contact lens wearers, and also sometimes people who do not wear contact lenses. Types of bacteria that commonly cause bacterial keratitis include:

References
  1. American Academy of Ophthalmology Cornea/External Disease Panel. Preferred Practice Pattern® Guidelines. Bacterial Keratitis. San Francisco, CA: American Academy of Ophthalmology; 2013.
  2. Liesegang TJ. Bacterial Keratitis. Infect Dis Clin North Am. 1992;6(4):815-29.
  3. Schein OD, Glynn RJ, Poggio EC, Seddon JM, Kenyon KR. The relative risk of ulcerative keratitis among users of daily-wear and extended-wear soft contact lenses: a case-control study. Microbial Keratitis Study Group. N Engl J Med. 1989;321(12):773-8.
  4. Poggio EC, Glynn RJ, Schein OD, Seddon JM, Shannon MJ, Scardino VA, Kenyon KR. The incidence of ulcerative keratitis among users of daily-wear and extended-wear soft contact lenses. N Engl J Med. 1989;321:779-83.
  5. Stern GA. Contact lens associated bacterial keratitis: past, present, and future. CLAO J. 1998 Jan;24(1):52-6.
  6. Keay L, Stapleton F, Schein O. Epidemiology of contact lens-related inflammation and microbial keratitis: a 20-year perspective. Eye Contact Lens. 2007;33:346-53.
  7. Hsiao CH, Lin HC, Chen YF, Ma DHK, Yeh LK, Tan HY, Huang SCM, Lin KK. Infectious keratitis related to overnight orthokeratology. Cornea. 2005;24:783-8.
  8. Tseng CH, Fong CF, Chen WL, Hou YC, Wang IJ, Hu FR. Overnight orthokeratology-associated microbial keratitis. Cornea. 2005; 24(7):778-82.
  9. Yepes N, Lee SB, Hill V, Ashenhurst M, Saunders PP, Slomovic AR. Infectious keratitis after overnight orthokeratology in Canada. Cornea. 2005 Oct;24(7):857-60.
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