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
    • Focal area(s) of redness
    • May have a tender scleral nodule (nodular episcleritis)

Work-Up

  • Must distinguish from scleritis
    • Scleritis likely to have pain and decreased vision
    • Use of 2.5% phenylephrine drops will cause vasoconstriction/blanching of episcleral but not scleral vessels. Thus, there will be decreased injection and redness in episcleritis but not scleritis.
  • Must distinguish from conjunctivitis
    • Episcleritis will usually have a sectoral pattern of injection, as opposed to a diffuse injection seen in conjunctivitis.

DDx

  1. Scleritis
  2. Conjunctivitis
  3. Herpes Keratitis

Eye Algorithm (Main)

Treatment

  1. Topical lubricants
    1. Artificial tears q4-6hr
  2. Oral NSAIDs

Disposition

Refer to ophtho to reduce chance of misdiagnosis

Prognosis

Self-limiting (will resolve within 2-3 weeks)

See Also

Scleritis

Source

UpToDate