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    Subjects/Ophthalmology/Corneal Ulcer — Bacterial and Fungal
    Corneal Ulcer — Bacterial and Fungal
    medium
    eye Ophthalmology

    A 32-year-old farmer from rural Maharashtra presents with a 4-day history of left eye pain, photophobia, and purulent discharge. On examination, he has a 2 mm central corneal ulcer with a white infiltrate and hypopyon. Gram stain of corneal scrapings shows gram-positive cocci in clusters. What is the most appropriate next step in management?

    A. Prescribe topical fluoroquinolone monotherapy and review in 48 hours
    B. Perform anterior chamber tap and inject intracameral ceftazidime
    C. Start topical fortified cefazolin 50 mg/mL and gentamicin 14 mg/mL every hour, and send culture for sensitivity
    D. Refer for corneal transplantation immediately

    Explanation

    Clinical Context

    This patient presents with a bacterial corneal ulcer (likely Staphylococcus aureus based on gram-positive cocci in clusters) with signs of anterior chamber involvement (hypopyon). The 4-day duration and purulent discharge indicate an established infection requiring aggressive topical therapy.

    Management Algorithm for Bacterial Corneal Ulcer

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    Key Point:

    Fortified antibiotics (cefazolin 50 mg/mL + gentamicin 14 mg/mL) are the gold standard for bacterial corneal ulcers with hypopyon. These achieve higher corneal and aqueous concentrations than topical drops alone and are essential when anterior chamber is threatened.

    High-Yield:

    • Gram-positive cocci in clusters = Staphylococcus aureus → cephalosporin + aminoglycoside
    • Gram-negative rods = Pseudomonas aeruginosa → ceftazidime + gentamicin
    • Fortified drops must be prepared extemporaneously (not commercially available) and instilled every 1–2 hours
    • Culture sensitivity guides de-escalation at 48–72 hours

    Clinical Pearl:

    The presence of hypopyon (white fluid level in anterior chamber) indicates spillover of inflammatory cells and organisms into the aqueous humor, signaling a more aggressive infection. This mandates fortified antibiotics rather than monotherapy.

    Warning:

    Intracameral injection is NOT first-line for bacterial ulcers. It is reserved for cases with impending or frank perforation, or when topical therapy has failed. Anterior chamber tap is therapeutic only if there is concern for endophthalmitis (which is not the case here — the hypopyon is sterile inflammatory response).

    Tip:

    Always obtain corneal scrapings before starting antibiotics. Once antibiotics are started, culture yield drops significantly. The Gram stain result (available within 30 minutes) guides empiric choice while awaiting full culture sensitivity (48–72 hours).

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