TY - JOUR KW - Humans KW - Keratitis KW - leprosy KW - Middle Aged AU - Lamba P A AU - Rohatgi J AB -

Corneal affections cause severe ocular morbidity in leprosy. Poor nutrition and low socio-economic status make the eyes prone to repeated secondary infections which makes the pattern of corneal disease in this country different from that reported in western literature. A study of 250 patients shows that leprotic keratopathy has 4 different patterns. Primary leprous keratitis was seen in 56.5% of cases, while secondary leprous keratitis (groups B, C & D) constituted 57.7%. In the latter group the ocular morbidity could be prevented by controlling infection and prevention of concomitant diseases. Cases of lepromatous leprosy showed a consistently higher incidence of different types of corneal involvement than tuberculoid cases.

BT - Indian journal of leprosy C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2212733?dopt=Abstract CN - Infolep Library - available DA - 1990 Apr-Jun IS - 2 J2 - Indian J Lepr LA - eng N2 -

Corneal affections cause severe ocular morbidity in leprosy. Poor nutrition and low socio-economic status make the eyes prone to repeated secondary infections which makes the pattern of corneal disease in this country different from that reported in western literature. A study of 250 patients shows that leprotic keratopathy has 4 different patterns. Primary leprous keratitis was seen in 56.5% of cases, while secondary leprous keratitis (groups B, C & D) constituted 57.7%. In the latter group the ocular morbidity could be prevented by controlling infection and prevention of concomitant diseases. Cases of lepromatous leprosy showed a consistently higher incidence of different types of corneal involvement than tuberculoid cases.

PY - 1990 SP - 186 EP - 92 T2 - Indian journal of leprosy TI - Leprotic keratopathy in India. VL - 62 SN - 0254-9395 ER -