Topically administered corticosteroids: effect on antibiotic-treated bacterial keratitis
H. M. Leibowitz and A. Kupferman
The effect of a topically administered corticosteroid, 1.0% prednisolone
acetate, on bacterial replication in rabbit cornea receiving adequate
antibiotic therapy was determined. Staphylococcus aureus keratitis was
treated either with neomycin sulfate or gentamicin sulfate, while
Pseudomonas aeruginosa keratitis was treated either with gentamicin or
polymyxin B sulfate. Each antibiotic was administered topically at hourly
intervals in both the commercially available concentration and as a
formulation containing four times the quantity of drug found in the
commercial preparations. In each instance, the antibiotic regimen sharply
reduced the number of viable organisms in the cornea, although the
concentrated preparations did so more rapidly and effectively. The addition
of 1.0% prednisolone acetate had no measurable effect on outcome. In no
instance was there a statistically significant difference between number of
residual viable organisms in antibiotic-treated corneas and
antibiotic/corticosteroid-treated corneas.