Vernal keratoconjunctivitis


Vernal keratoconjunctivitis is a recurrent, bilateral, and self-limiting inflammation of conjunctiva, having a periodic seasonal incidence.

Vernal keratopathy

Corneal involvement in VKC may be primary or secondary due to extension of limbal lesions. Vernal keratopathy includes 5 types of lesions.
  1. Punctuate epithelial keratitis.
  2. Ulcerative vernal keratitis.
  3. Vernal corneal plaques.
  4. Subepithelial scarring.
  5. Pseudogerontoxon.

    Sign and symptoms

  1. Palpebral form- Usually upper tarsal conjunctiva of both the eyes is involved. Typical lesion is characterized by the presence of hard, flat-topped papillae arranged in cobblestone or pavement stone fashion. In severe cases papillae undergo hypertrophy to produce cauliflower-like excrescences of 'giant papillae'.
  2. Bulbar form- It is characterised by dusky red triangular congestion of bulbar conjunctiva in palpebral area, gelatinous thickened accumulation of tissue around limbus and presence of discrete whitish raised dots along the limbus.
  3. Mixed form- Shows the features of both palpebral and bulbar types.

    Cause

VKC is thought to be an allergic disorder in which IgE mediated mechanism play a role. Such patients often give family history of other atopic diseases such as hay fever, asthma or eczema, and their peripheral blood shows eosinophilia and increased serum IgE levels.

Risk factors

Classification

Based on severity, authors have classified VKC into clinical grades:
Grade 0 - Absence of symptoms
Grade 1 MILD - Symptoms but no corneal involvement
Grade 2 MODERATE - Symptoms with photophobia but no corneal involvement
Grade 3 SEVERE - Symptoms, photophobia, mild to moderate SPK's OR with Diffuse SPK or corneal ulcer

Treatment