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Featured researches published by Philippe Kestelyn.


The Lancet | 1984

ACQUIRED IMMUNODEFICIENCY SYNDROME IN RWANDA

Philippe Van de Perre; Philippe Lepage; Philippe Kestelyn; AntonC. Hekker; Dominique Rouvroy; Jos Bogaerts; Joseph Kayihigi; Jean-Paul Butzler; Nathan Clumeck

To evaluate acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in central Africa a prospective study was done in Kigali, Rwanda, where Kaposis sarcoma (KS) is endemic. During a 4 week period, 26 patients (17 males and 9 females) were diagnosed. 16 patients had opportunistic infections, associated with KS in only 2; 1 had multifocal KS alone; and 9 had clinical conditions consistent with prodromes of AIDS. All patients had severe T-cell defects characterised by cutaneous anergy, a striking decrease in the number of helper T cells, and a decreased OKT4:OKT8 ratio (mean 0.27). 21 of the 22 adult patients were living in urban centres and many of them were in the middle to upper income bracket. Most of the men were promiscuous heterosexuals and 43% of the females were prostitutes. No patient had a history of homosexuality, intravenous drug abuse, or transfusion in the previous 5 years. This study suggests that AIDS is present in central Africa as an entity probably unrelated to the well-known endemic African KS. An association of an urban environment, a relatively high income, and heterosexual promiscuity could be a risk factor for AIDS in Africa.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1993

Ophthalmic Manifestations of Infections with Cryptococcus neoformans in Patients with the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome

Philippe Kestelyn; H. Taelman; Jos Bogaerts; A. Kagame; Mohamed Abdel Aziz; Batungwanayo J; Stevens Am; Philippe Van de Perre

The present study was undertaken to determine the nature and the prevalence of ophthalmic manifestations of infections with Cryptococcus neoformans in human immunodeficiency virus seropositive patients and to analyze whether the presence or absence of ocular signs is associated with improved survival. Eighty human immunodeficiency virus seropositive patients with cryptococcal infection were enrolled. We observed papilledema in 26 of the 80 patients (32.5%). Visual loss and abducens nerve palsy occurred in seven patients (9%). Only two patients (2.5%) had optic atrophy. Visual loss caused by optic nerve involvement was less frequent among the 62 patients treated with oral conazoles exclusively than among the 18 patients who had received amphotericin Bora combination of amphotericin B and conazoles. Actual invasion of the intraocular structures with Cryptococcus neoformans was an uncommon complication in our series. In addition to the ocular manifestations attributable to cryptococcal disease, human immunodeficiency virus-related retinopathy was present in nearly half of the patients. Cytomegalovirus retinitis was diagnosed in four patients (5%). The 26 patients (32.5%) with papilledema had a median survival of 182 days vs 160 days for the patients without papilledema. The median survival for 18 patients (22.5%) with cotton-wool spots was 102 days vs 186 days for those without cotton-wool spots. The differences between these subgroups were not statistically significant.


Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1988

Herpes zoster in African patients: an early manifestation of HIV infection.

Philippe Van de Perre; Eric Bakkers; Jean Batungwanayo; Philippe Kestelyn; Philippe Lepage; Didace Nzaramba; Jos Bogaerts; Antoine Serufilira; Dominique Rouvroy; Alphonse Uwimana; Jean-Paul Butzler

During a 3-month period, 131 cases of herpes zoster were diagnosed in Kigali, Rwanda. There were 46 female and 85 male patients. Mean age was 29 years (range 1-66). An unusually high proportion of patients presented with cranial and sacral nerve localisation of their cutaneous lesions. 55/131 patients (42%) had involvement of more than one dermatome. None of the patients had an underlying condition known to favour herpes zoster. 120/131 (92%) had antibodies to HIV detected by an immunoenzymatic assay (EIA) and indirect immunofluorescence. 92/125 adult patients (74%) had no sign or symptom related to HIV infection other than herpes zoster. This study suggests that herpes zoster in Central Africa is an early and readily detectable manifestation of HIV-induced immunosuppression.


Archives of Ophthalmology | 2011

Bilateral acute iris transillumination

Ilknur Tugal-Tutkun; Sumru Onal; Aylin Garip; Muhittin Taskapili; Haluk Kazokoglu; Sibel Kadayifcilar; Philippe Kestelyn

OBJECTIVE To describe a series of patients with bilateral acute iris transillumination, pigment dispersion, and sphincter paralysis. METHODS We reviewed the medical records and clinical photographs of 26 patients seen at 5 centers in Turkey and Belgium between March 16, 2006, and July 6, 2010. Observation procedures included clinical examination, anterior segment color photography, gonioscopy, laser flare photometry, and pupillometry. RESULTS All 26 patients (20 women and 6 men; mean [SD] age, 43.2 [10.5] years) had bilateral involvement. Twenty-three patients (88%) had acute-onset disease with severe photophobia and red eyes. Nineteen patients (73%) had a preceding flulike illness and used systemic antibiotics, including moxifloxacin. Diagnostic laboratory workup was unremarkable. There was pigment discharge into the anterior chamber, and flare was elevated in the absence of inflammatory cells. Most patients had severe diffuse transillumination of the iris and mydriatic distorted pupils. Pupillometry revealed a compromised reaction to light. The most serious complication was an intractable early rise in intraocular pressure. Gonioscopy revealed heavy pigment deposition in the trabecular meshwork. Although symptoms were relieved promptly by application of topical corticosteroid, the median duration of pigment dispersion was 5.25 months. CONCLUSIONS Bilateral acute iris transillumination with pigment dispersion and persistent mydriasis is a new clinical entity that is not an ocular adverse effect of oral moxifloxacin treatment, as previously suggested. The etiopathogenesis of this entity remains to be elucidated.


Acta Ophthalmologica | 2012

Benzalkonium chloride induces anterior chamber inflammation in previously untreated patients with ocular hypertension as measured by flare meter: a randomized clinical trial.

Stevens Am; Philippe Kestelyn; Dirk De Bacquer

Purpose:  The deleterious effects of benzalkonium chloride (BAK) on the ocular surface are well known. However, few clinical data are available to prove a toxic effect at the level of the anterior chamber. The laser flare meter is a reliable tool to detect low levels of inflammation in the anterior chamber. We wanted to know whether instillation of BAK‐preserved timolol in one eye would result in higher laser flare values than the instillation of preservative‐free timolol in the fellow eye.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2011

Vernal Keratoconjunctivitis in School Children in Rwanda and Its Association with Socio-Economic Status: A Population-Based Survey

Stefan De Smedt; John Nkurikiye; Yannick Fonteyne; Arjan Hogewoning; Marjan Van Esbroeck; Dirk De Bacquer; Stephen J. Tuft; Clare Gilbert; Joris R. Delanghe; Philippe Kestelyn

Vernal keratoconjunctivitis (VKC) is an allergic eye disease and an important cause of hospital referral among children in Africa and Asia. Hospital-based studies have suggested a role for parasites in its pathogenesis. To determine the prevalence and risk factors for VKC in Central Africa, we conducted a nested population-based case control study in Rwanda, involving randomly selected primary schools from different environments (rural/urban) and climate. A prevalence of VKC of 4.0% (95% confidence interval 3.3-4.7%) was found among 3,041 children studied (participation rate 94.7%). The intestinal parasitic burden was not related to VKC. Besides hot dry climate (odds ratio [OR] = 1.5, P = 0.05) and male gender (OR = 1.7, P = 0.005), multivariate analysis identified higher economic status as a risk for VKC (OR = 1.4, P = 0.005). The effect on VKC of higher economic status appears not to act through differences in parasitic intestinal load.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1989

Treatment of Adult Gonococcal Keratoconjunctivitis with Oral Norfloxacin

Philippe Kestelyn; Jos Bogaerts; Stevens Am; Peter Piot; André Meheus

We evaluated the efficacy of oral norfloxacin in 15 patients with culture-proven gonococcal eye disease caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae. The first seven patients received 1,200 mg of oral norfloxacin for three consecutive days. The other eight patients were each treated with a single oral dose of 1,200 mg of norfloxacin. All control cultures were negative, and there was no progression of the corneal lesions after treatment was initiated. No adverse effects were observed. The results of this study suggested that a single dose of oral norfloxacin may be a valuable alternative to the currently recommended treatment regimens for gonococcal eye disease because it combines high efficacy and low toxicity with low cost and excellent patient compliance.


Sexually Transmitted Diseases | 1987

Gonorrheal keratoconjunctivitis in African adults.

Philippe Kestelyn; Jos Bogaerts; Andre Meheus

We describe six cases of keratoconjunctivitis due to Neisseria gonorrhoeae in adults. All strains tested were penicillinase-producing N. gonorrhoeae (PPNG), and we conclude that the rising incidence of corneal involvement, a classic complication in the pre-antibiotic era, is due to ineffective treatment with penicillin. Indeed, the progression of the ocular lesions was stopped and microbiologic cure was obtained in all our patients after treatment with either spectinomycin or cefotaxime. These results demonstrate that early and effective treatment of adult gonococcal conjunctivitis is mandatory to avoid potentially blinding complications such as corneal ulceration and perforation of the eye.


International Ophthalmology | 1986

Isolation of the human T-cell leukemia/lymphotropic virus type III from aqueous humor in two patients with perivasculitis of the retinal vessels

Philippe Kestelyn; Philippe Van de Perre; Suzy Sprecher-Goldberger

SummaryThe human T-cell leukemia/lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III) has been isolated from aqueous humor in two patients with perivasculitis of the peripheral retinal vessels, an AIDS-related ocular manifestation. Both patients had antibodies to HTLV-III and although they presented with herpes zoster ophthalmicus, they did not present other symptoms known to be associated with HTLV-III infection. The isolation of HTLV-III from aqueous humor in these two patients with retinal perivasculitis suggests that the virus itself may play a role in the etiology of this ocular sign. The presence of infectious HTLV-III in the anterior chamber further emphasises the necessity to discard corneas from HTLV-III infected donors.


Archives of Ophthalmology | 2011

Increased Levator Muscle Function by Supramaximal Resection in Patients With Blepharophimosis-Ptosis–Epicanthus Inversus Syndrome

Christian Decock; Akash D. Shah; Christophe Delaey; Ramses Forsyth; Wouter Bauters; Philippe Kestelyn; Elfride De Baere; Ilse Claerhout

OBJECTIVE To study the efficacy and clinical and anatomical results of supramaximal levator resection in patients with blepharophimosis-ptosis-epicanthus inversus syndrome (BPES) with severe congenital ptosis with poor levator function (LF). METHODS Eleven patients with molecularly proven BPES underwent supramaximal levator resection. Palpebral fissure height and LF were measured preoperatively and postoperatively. RESULTS All patients showed an excellent reduction in ptosis with a single intervention resulting in a clear visual axis. Palpebral fissure height improved from mean (SD) 3.3 (0.7) mm preoperatively to 7.1 (0.9) mm postoperatively (P value <.001). Four patients underwent additional surgery because of cosmetic issues with eyelid height asymmetry. All patients showed a marked, consistent, and lasting improvement in LF, going from mean (SD) 1.9 (0.9) mm preoperatively to 7.4 (1.1) mm postoperatively (P value <.001). This improvement could be attributed to the presence of a very long and thin tendon, as well as a striated muscle belly. This elongated aponeurosis inhibits the levator muscle from having sufficient impact on the vertical eyelid excursion. CONCLUSIONS We demonstrated that supramaximal levator resection performed in patients with BPES not only results in good cosmetic appearance in terms of ptosis reduction in the majority of cases but also in a significant increase of the levator palpebrae superioris function. An anatomical substrate was found to explain these findings. To our knowledge, this is the first study to provide evidence of a marked increase in LF in BPES due to resection of the elongated tendon with reinsertion of the muscle belly.

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Ilse Claerhout

Ghent University Hospital

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Philippe Lepage

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Stevens Am

Ghent University Hospital

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Bart P. Leroy

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Bp Leroy

Ghent University Hospital

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Akash D. Shah

Ghent University Hospital

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