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Ocular staphylococcal hypersensitivity - External and Internal Eye
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed

Ocular staphylococcal hypersensitivity - External and Internal Eye

Contributors: Brandon D. Ayres MD, Christopher Rapuano MD, Harvey A. Brown MD, Sunir J. Garg MD, Lauren Patty Daskivich MD, MSHS
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed

Synopsis

Staphylococcal hypersensitivity, or staphylococcal marginal keratitis, is an immune response seen in the peripheral cornea to the patients' eyelid flora. Patients will often complain of pain, light sensitivity, redness, tearing, eyelid crusting, and foreign body sensation. If the tearing is severe enough, vision may be reduced.

Codes

ICD10CM:
H16.8 – Other keratitis

SNOMEDCT:
95730003 – Marginal keratitis

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Diagnostic Pearls

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Differential Diagnosis & Pitfalls

To perform a comparison, select diagnoses from the classic differential

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Best Tests

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Management Pearls

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Therapy

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References

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Last Updated:12/21/2008
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Ocular staphylococcal hypersensitivity - External and Internal Eye
A medical illustration showing key findings of Ocular staphylococcal hypersensitivity : Photophobia, Bilateral distribution, Corneal peripheral lesion, Conjunctival injection, Excessive tearing
Clinical image of Ocular staphylococcal hypersensitivity - imageId=3242048. Click to open in gallery.
Copyright © 2024 VisualDx®. All rights reserved.