Abstract

Objective: To investigate the clinical results of topical anesthetic drug (TAD) abuse and to evaluate the results in terms of preventive medicine and public health.Methods: Patients who had been followed in a cornea unit between March 2009 and November 2011 for TAD abuse keratopathy were included in the study. The demographics, duration of TAD use, symptoms, ocular findings, treatment modalities, visual acuities, complications and accompanying psychiatric problems data were obtained from medical records.Results: Twelve eyes of 8 patients (3 females and 5 males) were evaluated retrospectively. One of the patients was provided the drug with a primary care pratitioner’s prescription and for the other 7 patients, it was available from pharmacies without prescription.According to their clinical history, 4 patients were suffering from exposure to welding flash with a corneal foreign body, 2 from lagophthalmus-related keratopathy, 1 from traumatic corneal abrasion, and 1 from exposure to silica dust at work. The mean duration of TAD usage was 14.8 ± 7.78 days. Slit-lamp examination revealed corneal epithelial defect in all eyes, stromal opacity in 11 eyes and ring-shaped infiltrates in 8 eyes.Conclusion: Uncontrolled overuse of TAD can lead to serious ocular morbidities. Similarity of the clinical signs of this abuse to those of infectious keratitis together with the fact practitioners and managers to take measures to prevent the ready supply of these drugs from pharmacies and to raise public awareness with education programs.

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