Moderate-to-severe ocular pain, foreign body sensation, red eye, tearing, photophobia, and blurred vision; often with a history of welding or using a sunlamp without adequate protective eyewear. Symptoms typically worsen 6 to 12 hours after exposure. Usually bilateral.
Dense, confluent punctate epithelial defects in an interpalpebral distribution highlighted with fluorescein staining.
Conjunctival injection, mild-to-moderate eyelid edema, mild-to-no corneal edema, relatively miotic pupils that react sluggishly, and mild anterior chamber reaction.
Toxic epithelial keratopathy from exposure to a chemical (e.g., solvents, alcohol) or drug (e.g., neomycin, gentamicin, antiviral agents, anesthetic drops).
Thermal burn/keratopathy: Often from contact with curling iron, boiling fluid, fire ember, or flame. Injury is usually limited to corneal epithelium; may have marked superficial corneal opacification or eschar. Treat with possible debridement of involved area and then as for corneal abrasion. See 3.3, Corneal Abrasion.
See 4.1, Superficial Punctate Keratopathy.
History: Welding? Sunlamp use? Ultraviolet light sanitizer use? Topical medications? Chemical exposure? Prior episodes? Use of protective eyewear?
Slit-lamp examination: Use fluorescein stain. Evert the eyelids to search for a foreign body.
If chemical exposure suspected, check pH of tear lake in upper and lower conjunctival fornices. If not neutral (6.8 to 7.5), treat as chemical burn. See 3.1, Chemical Burn.
If a bandage soft contact lens was placed, the patient is seen in 1 to 2 days.
Reliable patients without a bandage soft contact lens are asked to assess their own symptoms after 24 hours.
Patients with unreliable follow-up or those with an unclear etiology should not have a bandage soft contact lens placed. Such patients should be reexamined in 1 to 2 days.