Abstract :
Purpose: To know the burden of infectious and non-infectious agents associated with ocular infection in pre pandemic and Covid-19 pandemic period with special emphasis on clinical presentation.
Materials and Methods: Demographic, clinical and associated comorbidities, details were collected from the patients presenting to the ophthalmologist in Andaman Islands from August 2017- August 2021. Collected data were statistically computed by using STATA v15.1(Stata Corporation, College Station, TX, USA).
Results: Ocular infections were found in 50.6% of 10,519 kerato-conjunctivitis patients. The highly affected cohort was aged 31 to 40 years (20.10%). No significant gender distribution difference was seen. Among 70% of cases unilaterality was common. The main clinical complaints were erythema (47.5%), lacrimation (41.2%), and pruritus (26.5%). 32.9% had discomfort, and 10% reported decreased eyesight. Additionally, 1,321 of 5,319 patients were using glasses. Additionally, 9.8% (520 people) had hypertension and 9.3% had diabetes. This investigation identified significant clinical and demographic changes during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Conclusion: This study contributes to improved prevention, control strategies and enhances diagnostic accuracy by analysing diverse clinical-epidemiological factors of keratoconjunctivitis in Andaman Islands.
Keyword :
Ocular infections, Sterile and non- sterile conditions, Infectious conjunctivitis, Viral conjunctivitis, Bacterial conjunctivitis.