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Effect of repeated epilation for minor trachomatous trichiasis on lash burden, phenotype and surgical management willingness: A cohort study

Authors :
Bizuayehu Gashaw
E. Kelly Callahan
David Macleod
Zerihun Tadesse
Chrissy h. Roberts
Tariku Wondie
Matthew J. Burton
Wubshet Gobezie
Esmael Habtamu
Abebaw Gebeyehu
Source :
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, Vol 14, Iss 12, p e0008882 (2020), PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2020.

Abstract

Background WHO endorsed the use of epilation as an alternative treatment to surgery for the management of both minor unoperated TT (UTT) and postoperative TT (PTT). However, some trachoma control programmes hesitated to implement epilation citing concerns that it would hamper TT surgical acceptance and result in larger numbers of and stiffer trichiatic eyelashes than the original TT lashes. We investigated the burden and phenotypes of post-epilation trichiatic eyelashes, and willingness to accept surgical management separately in unoperated and postoperative TT cases. Methodology/Principal findings We recruited cases with minor (≤5 eyelashes from the upper eyelid touching the eye or evidence of epilation in<br />Author summary Trachomatous Trichiasis (TT), the blinding stage of trachoma, ranges from few peripheral eyelashes touching the eye to all eyelashes scratching the cornea. TT is mainly treated with corrective eyelid surgery. However, not all TT cases require surgical correction, and some, particularly, those with few eyelashes decline surgery. Epilation, the repeated removal of eyelashes, is a very common clinical and traditional practice in many trachoma endemic settings. The World Health Organisation recommends that epilation can be offered as an alternative management strategy to surgery for patients with few eyelashes touching the eye or refusing surgery. However, some trachoma control programmes hesitated to implement epilation with the concern that it would hamper surgical acceptance and results in larger numbers of and stiffer eyelashes touching the eye than the original TT eyelashes. In this study, we explored if these concerns are true in epilating minor (≤5 eyelashes from the upper eyelid touching the eye or evidence of epilation in

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19352735 and 19352727
Volume :
14
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cb20ab19236598c9d504c82aa3421bed