Periorbital cellulitis

Background

Periorbital anatomy.
  • Also known as preseptal cellulitis — infection anterior to the orbital septum
  • Most often due to contiguous spread from sinusitis, skin infection, insect bite, or local trauma
  • Most patients are <10 years old
  • Rarely progresses to orbital cellulitis, but must be distinguished from it (see table below)
  • Common organisms: S. aureus, S. pneumoniae, S. pyogenes, H. influenzae (in unvaccinated)

Periorbital vs Orbital Cellulitis

Clinical Features

Periorbital cellulitis

.

Differential Diagnosis

Periorbital swelling

Proptosis

No proptosis

Lid Complications

Other

Evaluation

Periorbital cellulitis caused by a dental infection (also causing maxillary sinusitis).
  • Visual acuity, pupil exam, extraocular movement assessment — essential to distinguish from orbital cellulitis
  • CT orbit with IV contrast if:
    • Equivocal exam (unable to fully assess proptosis, EOM, or pain with eye movement)
    • Unable to accurately assess vision (e.g. age <1 year)
    • Toxic-appearing or not improving on antibiotics
    • Concern for orbital abscess (subperiosteal or orbital)
  • Blood cultures if febrile or toxic-appearing

Management

Antibiotics

Outpatient

Treatment recommended for 5-7 days. If signs of cellulitis persist at the end of this period, treatment should be continued until the eyelid erythema and swelling have resolved or nearly resolved.

  • TMP/SMX 1-2 double-strength tablets BID OR

- In children: TMP/SMX 8 to 12 mg/kg QD of the TMP component divided every 12 hours

  • Clindamycin 300mg Q8H - In children: Clindamycin 30 to 40 mg/kg per day in three to four equally divided doses, maximum 1.8 grams per day

PLUS one of the following agents:

- In children: Amoxicillin 45-90 mg/kg per day divided every 12 hours

- In children: Cefpodoxime 10 mg/kg per day divided every 12 hours, max 200 mg

  • Cefdinir 300 mg BID - In children: Cefdinir 14 mg/kg per day, divided every 12 hours, max daily 600 mg

Inpatient

Pediatric:

Disposition

  • Outpatient: Well-appearing, afebrile, mild disease, reliable follow-up in 24 hours
  • Admit: Age <1 year, toxic-appearing, febrile, unable to tolerate PO, failed outpatient therapy, concern for orbital involvement
  • Return precautions: Worsening swelling, fever, vision changes, pain with eye movement, inability to open eye

See Also

References