Abstract

Dematiaceous fungal keratitis is an important etiology of visual loss, particularly in an agricultural society. From a retrospective review of medical records from 2012 to 2020, 50 keratitis cases of cultured-positive for dematiaceous fungi were presented at a tertiary care hospital in Northern Thailand. The study aimed to identify the isolated causative dematiaceous species using the PCR technique and to explore their related clinical features, including treatment prognoses. Sequencing of the amplified D1/D2 domains and/or ITS region were applied and sequenced. Of the 50 dematiaceous fungal keratitis cases, 41 patients were males (82%). In most cases, the onset happened during the monsoon season (June to September) (48%). The majority of the patients (72%) had a history of ocular trauma from an organic foreign body. The most common species identified were Lasiodiplodia spp. (19.35%), followed by Cladosporium spp. and Curvularia spp. (12.90% each). About half of the patients (52%) were in the medical failure group where surgical intervention was required. In summary, ocular trauma from an organic foreign body was the major risk factor of dematiaceous fungal keratitis in Northern Thailand. The brown pigmentation could be observed in only 26%. Significant prognostic factors for medical failure were visual acuity at presentation, area of infiltrate, depth of the lesions, and hypopyon.

Highlights

  • Fungal keratitis remains one of the significant ophthalmologic conditions leading to visual impairments in an agricultural society [1,2]

  • Dematiaceous fungi are ubiquitously found in soil, any agricultural-related accidents can introduce the fungi from the vegetative materials into the eyes, resulting in keratitis

  • From a retrospective review of medical records from 2012 to 2020, 50 keratitis cases of cultured-positive for dematiaceous fungi have presented at Chiang Mai University

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Summary

Introduction

Fungal keratitis remains one of the significant ophthalmologic conditions leading to visual impairments in an agricultural society [1,2]. The most common fungal pathogens include Aspergillus spp., Fusarium spp., and dematiaceous fungi. The proportion of dematiaceous fungi as a causative organism of fungal keratitis varied from 4.4 to 44.2% [1,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Dematiaceous fungal keratitis is considered a major infectious ophthalmic etiology of visual loss, in an agricultural setting [10]. The typical clinical characteristics of dematiaceous fungal keratitis can be very distinctive, with dark (either black or brown) pigments stained on the ulcer, the non-pigmented lesions are not uncommon. The fungi generally penetrate deep into the cornea, so with conventional corneal scraping and potassium hydroxide (KOH) stain, the yield of fungus is usually inadequate to confirm the diagnosis

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