A patient with TSPK may complain of blurred vision, dry eyes, a sensation of having a foreign body stuck in the eye, photophobia (sensitivity to bright light), burning sensations and watery eyes. On inspection with a slit lamp, tiny lumps can be found on the cornea of the eye. These lumps can be more easily seen after applying fluorescein or rose Bengal dye eye-drops. The lumps appear to be randomly positioned on the cornea and they may appear and disappear over a period of time (with or without treatment).
TSPK may affect one or both eyes. When both eyes are affected, the tiny lumps found on the cornea may differ in number between eyes. The severity of the symptoms often vary during the course of the disease. The disease may appear to go into remission, only to later reappear after months or years.
There are no proposed diagnostic criteria for TSPK, but its diagnostic features are "(1) the presence of bilateral punctate epithelial keratitis; (2) a chronic course with exacerbations and remissions; (3) healing without scar formation; (4) no response to antibiotics; and (5) a striking symptomatic response to topical corticosteroids."[4]
Treatment
There are a number of different treatments to deal with TSPK. Symptoms may disappear if untreated, but treatment may decrease both the healing time and the chances of remission.[citation needed]
Artificial tear eye-drops or ointments may be a suitable treatment for mild cases.
^Noble J, Boerman H, Jiang W, Martén L, McCormick GJ, Pepose JS, Solomon R, Yeu E (June 2007). "Peer-Reviewed Literature: The Treatment of Thygeson's Superficial Punctate Keratitis". Cataract & Refractive Surgery Today: 21–23.
^Kobayashi A, Yoshita T, Sugiyama K, Miyashita K, Niida Y, Koizumi S, Tseng SC (January 2006). "Amniotic membrane transplantation in acute phase of toxic epidermal necrolysis with severe corneal involvement". Ophthalmology. 113 (1): 126–132. doi:10.1016/j.ophtha.2005.09.001. PMID16324747.
^Goldstein MH, Feistmann JA, Bhatti MT (October 2002). "PRK-pTK as a treatment for a patient with Thygeson's superficial punctate keratopathy". The CLAO Journal. 28 (4): 172–173. doi:10.1097/01.ICL.0000024359.29208.59 (inactive 1 November 2024). PMID12394540. S2CID23076934.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)