Total Live Articles: 417

Infective Keratitis

Infective Keratitis

Infective keratitis, also known as infectious keratitis and microbial keratitis, refers to an infection of the cornea and is a potentially sight-threatening cause of red eye.

This updated UKMLA guide to infective keratitis covers causes, risk factors, symptoms, diagnosis and management. Common subtypes include bacterial keratitis, fungal keratitis, Acanthamoeba keratitis, and herpes simplex keratitis.

Causes and Risk Factors

Infective keratitis can be classified into: [Ref]

Category Subcategories Specific organisms Risk factors
Microbial keratitis (includes 3 subtypes) Bacterial keratitis (most common)  Gram +ve

  • Staphylococcus species
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae

Gram -ve

  • Pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • Contact lens use (main risk factor in developed countries)
  • Ocular trauma / injury (main risk factor in developing countries)
  • Topical steroid use
  • Diabetes
  • Ocular surface disease (e.g. dry eye, blepharitis, exposure keratopathy)
Fungal keratitis Filamentous fungi: Fusarium spp., Aspergillus spp., and Curvularia spp.

Yeasts: Candida spp.

Corneal injury, especially involving vegetative matter or objects contaminated with soil
Parasitic keratitis Acanthamoeba species
  • Contact lens use (esp. soft lenses and poor cleaning procedures)
  • Exposure to contaminated soil or water (e.g. swimming or showering with contact lenses)
Viral keratitis Herpes simplex virus

Varicella zoster virus

HSV:

  • Young age
  • Immunosuppression
  • Topical steroid or prostaglandin

VZV:

  • Advancing age
  • Immunosuppression

Clinical Features

General / shared presentation: [Ref]

  • Red, painful eye
  • Reduced visual acuity or blurred vision
  • Photophobia
  • Foreign body sensation
  • Ocular discharge
  • Hypopyon (collection of WBCs / pus in the anterior chamber of the eye)

Contact lens use is an important risk factor, especially for bacterial and Acanthamoeba keratitis

Conjunctivitis vs keratitis

  • Conjunctivitis is inflammation of the conjunctiva and is usually less serious, typically causing redness, irritation/grittiness and discharge, with normal vision and no significant pain or photophobia.
  • Keratitis is inflammation/infection of the cornea and is potentially sight-threatening, suggested by eye pain, photophobia, reduced visual acuity, and contact lens use.

Complications

Key acute complications: [Ref]

  • Corneal perforation
  • Infectious spread → endophthalmitis
  • Uveitis, scleritis

Chronic complications: [Ref]

  • Corneal scarring
  • Blurred vision and astigmatism
  • Permanent vision loss
  • Neurotrophic keratopathy (damaged sensory nerves innervating the cornea → loss of corneal sensation, reduced blink reflex, tear dysfunction)

Investigation and Diagnosis

ALL cases of corneal keratitis / ulcer are potentially sight-threatening emergencies, which warrant same-day referral to emergency eye service.

Work-up:

  • Slit lamp examination +/- fluorescein staining to highlight surface defects (see below)
  • Corneal scrapes for Gram stain, culture, and PCR (viral and acanthamoeba) – if the ulcer is >1 mm

Ocular appearance depending on the causative organism: [Ref]

Causative organism Typical ocular appearance
Gram +ve bacterial keratitis
  • Grey/white, round or oval corneal ulcer / infiltrate
  • Distinct borders
  • Minimal haze in the surrounding stroma
Gram -ve bacterial keratitis (e.g. Pseudomonas) Often more aggressive:

  • Dense stromal suppuration (pus)
  • Marked corneal haze
  • Immune ring
Fungal keratitis
  • Feathery-edged stromal infiltrate
  • Raised lesions
  • Satellite lesions
Acanthamoeba (parasitic) keratitis
  • Classically causes severe pain out of proportion to signs
  • Ring-shaped corneal infiltrates (in established disease)
  • Satellite lesions
Herpes simplex keratitis
  • Dendritic ulcer with branching pattern (esp. with fluorescein staining)

Management

ALL cases of infective corneal keratitis / ulcer are potentially sight-threatening emergencies, which warrant same-day referral to emergency eye service.

Disclaimer:

  • There is no single universal UK guideline for the detailed management of all infective keratitis. Management varies by local ophthalmology/microbiology protocols
  • For exam purposes, focus on recognising infective keratitis as an emergency and understanding the main drug classes used, rather than memorising exact organism-specific regimens listed below

The summary below is based on NHS GGC guidance and standard medical literature.

Only consider surgical interventions if medical therapies failed or the infection causes severe structural damage:

  • 1st line surgical option: cyanoacrylate tissue adhesives or amniotic membrane transplants
  • Last resort: therapeutic penetrating keratoplasty (corneal transplant)

Choice of medical therapies:

Bacterial Keratitis

Stop wearing contact lenses

Empirical antimicrobial therapy: [Ref]

<1 mm >1 mm
Topical:

  • Ofloxacin 0.3%, 1-2 hourly by day
  • Chloramphenicol ointment at night
Topical:

  • Gentamicin 1.5% PLUS cefuroxime 5% hourly for at least 48 hours (day and night)
  • Atropine 1% BD

Oral antibiotics to be considered by the corneal team in severe cases

Admission criteria: [Ref]

  • Ulcer >2mm
  • Central ulcer
  • Hypopyon present
  • Impending corneal perforation
  • Limbal / scleral involvement
  • Likelihood of poor treatment compliance (e.g. lives alone)

Fungal Keratitis

Depends on the type of fungus: [Ref]

  • Topical natamycin 5% for Filamentous fungi (e.g. Fusarium)
  • Topical amphotericin B 0.15% or voriconazole 1% for yeasts (e.g. Candida)

Fungal keratitis generally has poor clinical outcomes because antifungal medications have poor penetration into the eye

Parasitic Keratitis (Acanthamoeba)

Acanthamoeba is highly resistant to therapy in its cyst form, so no single drug is effective [Ref]

  • Primary regimen: polyhexamethylene biguanide 0.02% PLUS chlorhexidine 0.02%
  • Drops are administered every hour for the first several days, and the overall treatment must be maintained for 6 to 12 months to prevent recurrence

Viral Keratitis

Herpes simplex keratitis (management depends on the layer of the cornea involved):

  • Epithelial keratitis: topical OR oral antivirals (e.g. aciclovir, valaciclovir)
  • Deeper (stromal and endothelial) keratitis: oral antivirals PLUS topical corticosteroids
    • Long-term antiviral prophylaxis is also recommended to prevent recurrences

Herpes zoster keratitis:

  • Oral antivirals (aciclovir / valaciclovir / famciclovir) to be started <72 hours of the onset

Related Articles

Infective Conjunctivitis

Red Eye Referral

Acute Angle-Closure Glaucoma

Share Your Feedback Below

Disclaimer

We’re actively expanding Guideline Genius to cover the full UKMLA content map. Therefore, you may notice some conditions not uploaded yet, or articles that currently focus on diagnosis and management for now.

We are also continuously reviewing and updating existing content to ensure accuracy and alignment with current guidelines. Some earlier articles are undergoing revision as part of this process. Once all content has been fully reviewed, this will be clearly communicated on the platform.

For updates, follow us on Instagram @guidelinegenius.

We welcome any feedback or suggestions via the anonymous feedback box at the bottom of each article and will do our best to respond promptly.

Thank you for your support.
The Guideline Genius Team

UK medical guidelines made easy. From guidelines to genius in minutes!

Quick Links

Cookie Policy

Social Media

© 2026 GUIDELINE GENIUS LTD

Stay Updated withGuideline Genius

Sign up to be notified when our newsletter launches, covering major guideline updates, article updates, and future UKMLA resources.