Diferencia entre revisiones de «Periorbital vs Orbital Cellulitis»

(Created page with "===Background=== * Important to distinguish between these two conditions * Orbital cellulitis may mimic periorbital cellulitis early in its course! * Orbital cellulitis most o...")
 
Línea 8: Línea 8:
* Periorbital cellulitis most often 2/2 contiguous infection of soft tissues of face and eyelids
* Periorbital cellulitis most often 2/2 contiguous infection of soft tissues of face and eyelids
* Periorbital cellulitis does not lead to orbital cellulitis
* Periorbital cellulitis does not lead to orbital cellulitis
===Signs/Symptoms ===
===Diagnosis===
# Periorbital Cellulitis
## Swelling and erythema of tissues surrounding the orbit
## +/- pain with eye movement
## +/- fever
# Orbital Cellulitis
## All of the above plus:
### Proptosis
### Chemosis (conj. swelling)
### Globe displacement
### Limitation of eye movements
### Double vision
### Vision loss (indicates orbital apex involvement)


* Periorbital Cellulitis
* Swelling and erythema of tissues surrounding the orbit
* +/- pain with eye movement
* +/- fever
* Orbital Cellulitis
* All of the above plus:
* Proptosis
* Chemosis (conj. swelling)
* Globe displacement
* Limitation of eye movements
* Double vision
* Vision loss (indicates orbital apex involvement)
===Diagnosis===
===Diagnosis===



Revisión del 13:52 29 mar 2011

Background

  • Important to distinguish between these two conditions
  • Orbital cellulitis may mimic periorbital cellulitis early in its course!
  • Orbital cellulitis most often 2/2 ethmoid sinusitis
  • May also be 2/2 orbital trauma, endophthalmitis, infectious infection from teeth / middle ear
  • Periorbital cellulitis most often 2/2 contiguous infection of soft tissues of face and eyelids
  • Periorbital cellulitis does not lead to orbital cellulitis

Diagnosis

  1. Periorbital Cellulitis
    1. Swelling and erythema of tissues surrounding the orbit
    2. +/- pain with eye movement
    3. +/- fever
  2. Orbital Cellulitis
    1. All of the above plus:
      1. Proptosis
      2. Chemosis (conj. swelling)
      3. Globe displacement
      4. Limitation of eye movements
      5. Double vision
      6. Vision loss (indicates orbital apex involvement)

Diagnosis

  • CT Orbit with IV contrast
  • Indicated for suspected orbital cellulitis or in pts who cannot accurately assess vision (e.g. age <1yr)
  • Findings c/w orbital cellulitis:
  • Proptosis
  • Inflammation of ocular muscles
  • Subperiosteal or orbital abscess

Complications

  • Subperiosteal Abscess
  • Must be distinguished from orbital cellulitis based on CT
  • Orbital Abscess
  • Pts tend to have severe proptosis, globe displacement, and appear systemically ill
  • May be clinically indistinguishable from orbital cellulitis; requires CT
  • Meningitis
  • Cavernous sinus thrombosis


Treatment

  • Periorbital Cellulitis
  • Most cases (except for pts < 1yr) can be managed as outpatient w/ oral abx and daily f/u
  • Treatment (7-10 days)
  • Augmentin 875mg BID OR
  • Cefpodoxime 200mg BID OR
  • Cefdinir 600mg qd
  • Orbital Cellulitis
  • Vancomycin +
  • Ampicillin-sulbactam 3 g IV q6hr OR
  • Ticarcillin-clavulanate 3.1 g IV q4h OR
  • Piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5 g IV q6h OR
  • Ceftriaxone 2 g IV q12hr OR
  • Cefotaxime 2 g IV q4h

See Also

Ophtho: Periorbital Swelling


Source: UpToDate