Endophthalmitis

Revision as of 02:46, 19 May 2015 by Nicoloid (talk | contribs) (added tetanus)
Endophthalmitis from retained foreign body

Background

  • Inflammation (usually infectious) of the deep eye structures (aqueous and vitreus chambers)
    • Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Bacillus cereus
  • Frequently leads to loss of vision (ocular emergency)

Causes

  • Cataract surgery
    • Usually within 6 weeks
  • Globe Rupture
    • Penetrating eye trauma more at risk than blunt eye trauma
  • Foreign body
  • Extension of keratitis
  • Hematogenous spread/endogenous (rare)

Clinical Features

  1. Headache
  2. Eye pain
  3. Photophobia
  4. Vision loss
  5. Ocular discharge
  6. May also see:
    1. Conjunctival/scleral injection
    2. Chemosis
    3. Hypopyon
    4. Uveitis

Work-Up

  • Visual Acuity
  • Inspect of lid, cornea, sclera
  • Slit lamp exam
  • Intraocular pressure
  • Bloodwork (CBC, ESR, ) only if considering endogenous endophthalmitis
  • Ultrasound to look for alternative diagnosis

DDx

Treatment

  • Emergent ophtho consult (for gram stain/culture and definitive treatment of intravitreal abx)
  • Systemic antibiotics for endogenous endophthalmitis (rare cause)
    • Systemic antibiotics for other etiologies is controversial
    • Antibiotic prophylaxis in Globe Rupture reduces incidence of endophthalmitis to <1%
    • tetanus, if indicated

Disposition

  • Admit

See Also

Eye Algorithm (Main) Globe Rupture

Source

Tintinalli Rosen's UpToDate