Abstract
To demonstrate a case of infectious crystalline keratopathy (ICK) caused by Pseudomonas fluoresecens (PF). Case report description. A 15-year-old female contact lens wearer presented complaining of eye pain and redness in the left eye. The patient reported that she had suffered a corneal scratch a few months earlier, which was treated by her family physician, and that she had felt some discomfort since then. The biomicroscopy showed a central corneal abscess with a crystalline appearance, stromal edema, the Tyndall effect, and abundant fibrin in the anterior chamber. A diagnosis of ICK was made. The culture was positive for gram-negative PF. Pseudomonas fluoresecens was sensitive to cephalosporins, quinolones, and tobramycin. No cases of ICK caused by PF have been reported previously. Two previous studies reported that the gram-negative Pseudomonas aeruginosa caused ICK. Unlike other ICK cases in which there is minimal stromal inflammation, the patient presented with an intense inflammatory reaction in the anterior chamber.
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