When Rare Fungi Invade the Cornea: Curvularia hawaiiensis Keratomycosis–A Case Report

Authors

  • Preeti S Maste, Arvind Tenagi, Ritiz Bora Author

Keywords:

Keratomycosis; Curvularia hawaiiensis; MALDI-TOF; Dematiaceous fungi.

Abstract

Background:  Keratomycosis (fungal keratitis) is a significant cause of corneal morbidity, particularly in tropical regions with  potential corneal scarring, opacity & blindness.  Most of the cases of Keratomycosis are caused by corneal trauma with vegetative matter contaminated with fungal spores in farm workers and other agricultural practices

 Case Presentation: A 55-year-old woman presented with irritation, burning, and foreign-body sensation in the right eye for four days. Corneal scrapings showed septate hyphae on KOH mount. Fungal culture yielded a brown-black colony, and LPCB mount indicated Curvularia species. MALDI-TOF MS confirmed Curvularia hawaiiensis. The patient responded well to topical voriconazole, natamycin, and moxifloxacin, achieving full recovery in three weeks.

Conclusion: Early diagnosis and species-level identification are essential to guide therapy in fungal keratitis. This case highlights the emerging role of rare dematiaceous fungi such as C. hawaiiensis..

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Published

2025-11-26