We report a case of corneal epithelial hyperplasia associated with chronic eye rubbing mimicking keratoconus. A 32-year-old man was presented with a 3-year history of suboptimal vision and astigmatism in his left eye. His history was significant for chronic left eye rubbing. The anterior corneal curvature map showed inferior steepening in the left eye; however, other features of ectasia were absent. Corneal epithelium thickness mapping with optical coherence tomography was significant for corresponding epithelial thickening. His corneal imaging remained stable at a 6-month follow-up examination. At month 15-and after cessation of eye rubbing behavior-the vision symptoms, refraction, and corneal imaging had normalized. In conclusion, chronic eye rubbing may cause reversible corneal epithelial hypertrophy. Eye rubbing should be considered in the evaluation of patients presenting with unexplained vision symptoms and changes in astigmatism that are not consistent with ectasia on corneal imaging.
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