Scleritis

Revision as of 05:42, 30 March 2011 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs)

Background

  • Potentially blinding disorder
  • 50% of cases associated with an underlying disorder
    • RA
    • Wgener's
    • IBD
  • Sclera fuses with the dura mater and arachnoid sheath of the opic nerve
    • Explains why optic nerve edema and visual compromise are common complications

Diagnosis

  • History
    • Intense ocular pain that radiates to the face
    • Pain with EOM (the extraocular muscles insert into the sclera)
    • Photophobia
    • Deep-red or purplish scleral hue
  • Physical
    • Essential sign is scleral edema, usually accompanied by violaceous discoloration of the globe
    • The globe is tender to palpation
    • Episcleral vessel dilation
  • Labs (to assess possible associated disease)
    • CBC
    • Chemistry
    • UA
      • Rule-out glomerulonephritis
    • ESR, CRP
  • Posterior Scleritis (posterior to the insertion of the extraocular muscles)
    • Physical exam often benign
      • Inflammation may sometimes be seen at the extremes of gaze
    • Pt c/o pain, pain upon EOM
    • Involvement of the optic nerve and retina is common
      • Retinal detachment, optic disc edema

Imaging

Ultrasound and CT can show thickening of the sclera

Treatment

  • Systemic therapy with NSAIDs, glucocorticoids, or other immunosuppressive drugs
  • NSAIDs
    • Indomethacin 25-75mg PO TID

Dispo

  • Urgent ophto consult

Complications

  • Cornea
    • Peripheral ulcerative keratitis > irreversible loss of vision
  • Uveal tract
    • Anterior uveitis seen in 40%
      • Spillover of inflammation from the sclera
  • Posterior segment
    • Retinal detachment, optic disc edema

Episcleritis

Background

  • Abrupt onset of inflammation in the episclera
  • 70% of cases occurs in women (usually young and middle-aged)
  • Usually a benign, self-limited condition
  • Usually not associated with an underlying disease

Diagnosis

  • History
    • Abrupt onset of redness, irritation, and watering of the eye
    • Pain is unusual
    • Vision unaffected
    • 50% of cases are bilateral
  • Physical
    • Vasodilatation of the superficial episcleral vessels

Work-Up

  • Must distinguish from scleritis
    • Phenylephrine drops lead to transient resolution of episcleral redness permitting evaluation of the sclera
  • Must distinguish from conjunctivitis
    • If the conjunctival injection is localized rather than diffuse, episcleritis is more likely

DDx

  1. Scleritis
  2. Conjunctivitis
  3. Herpes Keratitis

Treatment

  1. Topical lubricants
    1. Artificial tears q4-6hr

Disposition

Refer to ophtho to reduce chance of misdiagnosis

Source

UpToDate