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Corneal abrasion

For corneal abrasions in dogs and cats, see corneal ulcers.

Corneal abrasion is a medical condition involving the loss of the surface epitheliallayer of the eye's cornea.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  • 1 Etiology
  • 2 Symptoms and signs
  • 3 Diagnosis
  • 4 Treatment
  • 5 Complications

Etiology

It is generally caused by trauma, of which there are any number of possible causes, including from a finger 'poked' into an eye or from walking into the branch of a tree. A foreign bodygetting to the eye may also cause a scratch as the eye is rubbed.

Symptoms and signs

Symptoms of corneal abrasion include pain, photophobia, a foreign-body sensation, and a reflex production of tears. Signs include epithelial defects and edema, and often conjunctival injection, swollen eyelids, and a mild anterior-chamber reaction. The vision may be blured, both from any swelling of the cornea and the excess tears.

Diagnosis

Although corneal abrasions may be seen with ophthalmoscopes, slit lamp microscopesprovide higher magnification which allow for a more thorough evaluation. To aid in viewing, a fluoresceinstain that fills in the corneal defect and glows with a cobalt blue-light is generally instilled first.

A careful search should be made for any foreign body, in particular looking under the eyelids. Injury following use of hammers or power-tools should aways raise the possibility of a penetrating foreign body into the eye, for which urgent ophthalmologyopinion should be sought.

Treatment

Although small abrasions may require no specific treatment, larger abrasions are typically treated for a few days with a topical antibioticto prevent infection and a topical cycloplegicto reduce pain and improve comfort. Eye pads used in "pressure patching" may also improve comfort and promote healing by preventing repeated eyelid blinking that may cause further physical distruption to the cornea, but they are generally not applied in contact lens wearers or when the abrasion is at significant risk for infection.

Complications

Complications are the exception rather than the rule from simple corneal abrasions. It is important that any foreign body is identified and removed, especially if containing iron as rustingwill occur.

Occasionally the healed epithelium may be poorly adherent to the underlying basement membranein which case it may detach at intervals giving rise to recurrent corneal erosions.

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/Corneal_abrasion"



This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corneal+abrasion Wikipedia article Corneal abrasion.

 
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