Uveitis

Revision as of 02:13, 26 October 2011 by Jswartz (talk | contribs)

Background

  1. Uveitis = inflammation of iris, ciliary body, and/or choroid
    1. Anterior Uveitis
      1. Inflammation of iris and/or ciliary body
      2. Types:
        1. Iritis
        2. Iridocyclitis
    2. Posterior uveitis = choroiditis

Causes

  1. Inflammatory
    1. Associated with HLA B-27
    2. 50% have associated systemic disease
      1. Ankylosing spondylitis
      2. Psoriatic arthritis
      3. Reactive arthritis
      4. inflammatory bowel disease
      5. Sarcoidosis
      6. Juvenile idiopathic arthritis
      7. Behcet disease
      8. Kawasaki disease
      9. Multiple sclerosis
      10. Wegener’s granulomatosis
  2. Traumatic
  3. Infectious (uncommon)

Workup

  1. Slit-lamp
  2. Consider CXR (uveitis often associated with sarcoidosis, TB)

Diagnosis

Anterior

  1. Sudden red/painful eye
  2. Deep pain, worse with eye movement
  3. Limbic redness (as opposed to perilimbal sparing seen in conjunctivitis)
  4. Sluggish pupil
  5. Consensual photophobia
  6. Cell & flare

Posterior

  1. Floaters
  2. Visual changes
  3. Generally does not cause redness or significant pain
  4. Blind spots or flashing lights
  5. Cell & flare

DDx

Eye Algorithm (Main)

Treatment

  1. Infectious
    1. Treat the underlying infection
  2. Noninfectious
    1. Topical Steroid (anterior only)
      1. Prednisolone 1%
    2. Mydriatics (sympathomimetics)
      1. Phenylephrine HCl or Hydroxyamphetamine HBr
      2. Prevents the formation of synechiae
    3. Cycloplegics
      1. Relieves pain
      2. Scopolamine 0.25% OR cyclopentolate 1%

Disposition

  • Ophtho consult within 24hr

Complications

  1. Cataracts
  2. Glaucoma (from synechia)
  3. Retinal detachment

Source

Tintinalli