Retrospectively studied were 91 patients, 14 years of age or less, who had 152 penetrating keratoplasties in 107 eyes, with an average follow-up of 30.1 months. Survival analysis showed the probability of obtaining a clear graft at one year to be 60 +/- 8% in 45 eyes with congenital opacities, 70 +/- 8% in 31 eyes with opacities from trauma and 73 +/- 8% in 31 eyes with acquired nontraumatic opacities. Most failures occurred during the first postoperative year and were characterized by the gradual loss of graft clarity from undetermined cause. Twenty-nine percent (10) of the 34 eyes with congenital corneal opacities in which vision could be measured had a most recent visual acuity better than 6/120 (20/400). Irreversible amblyopia, glaucoma, other structural abnormalities of the anterior segment and mental retardation complicated visual rehabilitation in the congenital group. In the post-traumatic group, vision was better than 6/120 (20/400) in 45% (13) of 29 eyes, being limited by vitreoretinal pathology, fibrous ingrowth, and optic nerve damage from glaucoma. Visual acuity in the acquired, nontraumatic group was better than 6/120 (20/400) in 67% (20) of 30 eyes. The percentage of patients achieving 6/12 (20/40) or better in the congenital, post-traumatic, and nontraumatic groups were 3% (1/34), 17% (5/29), and 47% (14/30), respectively. In the congenital group, only patients with posterior polymorphous dystrophy obtained a visual acuity of 6/30 (20/100) or better. Preoperative vascularization of the cornea, persistent epithelial defects, and performance of lensectomy-vitrectomy were factors most highly correlated with poor graft survival.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)