Br J Ophthalmol 1999;83:957-960
( August )
Detection of herpes simplex virus DNA in atypical epithelial
keratitis using polymerase chain reaction
Noriko Koizumia, Kohji Nishidaa, Wakako Adachia, Mamoru Teia, Yoichi Honmaa, Atsuyoshi Dotaa, Chie Sotozonoa, Norihiko Yokoia, Shuji Yamamotob, Shigeru Kinoshitaa
a Department of
Ophthalmology, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Japan, b Department of Ophthalmology,
Osaka University Medical School, Japan
Correspondence to: Noriko Koizumi, MD, Department of Ophthalmology, Kyoto Prefectural
University of Medicine, Kawaramachi-hirokoji, Kamigyo-ku, Kyoto 602-0841, Japan.
Accepted for publication 26 April 1999
AIM
To study herpes
simplex virus (HSV) DNA in tears from patients with atypical epithelial
keratitis of unknown aetiology.
METHODS
Tear samples
were collected from 17 affected eyes of 17 consecutive patients
suffering from epithelial keratitis in whom HSV keratitis was suspected
but whose diagnosis was difficult on the basis of clinical
manifestations alone. Using reduced sensitivity polymerase chain
reaction (PCR), tear samples were tested for HSV DNA. Tears from the
unaffected eyes of the 17 patients were also examined, along with 38 tear samples from 19 normal volunteers. Southern blot analysis was
performed to confirm that amplified DNA bands were specific for HSV.
Clinical correlation with photographs of corneal lesions was
also investigated.
RESULTS
HSV DNA was
detected in tears from the affected eyes of eight of the 17 patients
with suspected HSV keratitis. Tears from the affected eyes of the other
patients were PCR negative, as were tears from the unaffected eyes of
all 17 patients, and from the 38 normal eyes. There was no correlation
between PCR results and clinical manifestation of keratitis.
CONCLUSIONS
Based on
the sensitivity of the PCR system, eight of 17 suspected HSV keratitis
patients were confirmed as suffering from HSV keratitis. HSV keratitis
should therefore be considered as a possible diagnosis in atypical
epithelial keratitis.
© 1999 by British Journal of Ophthalmology