Secuelas oftalmológicas secundarias a Síndrome de Stevens - Johnson

2019 
Figure A. Symblepharon, i.e., adhesion from the edges of the two eyelids (white arrow) and keratinization of the sclerocorneal limbus (yellow arrow) in the right eye. Figure B. Right eye: irregularity from the edge of the lower eyelid with complete obstruction and keratinization of the excretory ducts of the Meibomian glands, due to chronicity of the inflammation in consequence to Stevens - Johnson syndrome. Figure C. Right eye: showing complete conjunctivalization due to limbus failure and loss of the corneal epithelium in the patient’s right eye, leading to corneal haze as a sequel to chronic severe dry eye secondary to Stevens - Johnson syndrome. Figure D. Left eye: Boston type I keratoprosthesis in situ. As showed, the central cylinder allows light to enter through the eye. The holes seen through the tissue are on the titanium plate that holds the optical cylinder in place on the corneal tissue of a donor, sutured to the patient’s peripheral cornea. This donor corneal tissue is completely conjunctivalized and hazy, but since the end of the optical cylinder is made of synthetic material, it remains transparent. Keratinization of the surface is evident, with an accumulation of keratin in the interface between the synthetic material of the cylinder and the corneal tissue.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    11
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []