Proptosis

Background

  • Proptosis (exophthalmos) is forward displacement of the eye from the orbit
  • In the ED, the key concern is distinguishing emergent causes requiring immediate intervention from non-emergent etiologies
  • Unilateral acute proptosis with pain, vision loss, or elevated IOP is an emergency — consider retrobulbar hemorrhage, orbital cellulitis, or cavernous sinus thrombosis
  • Bilateral proptosis is most commonly Graves' disease
  • Retrobulbar hemorrhage with elevated IOP requires emergent lateral canthotomy

Clinical Features

Proptosis in a woman with retrobulbar abscess and orbital cellulitis.

History

  • Unilateral vs. bilateral
  • Onset: acute (hours — retrobulbar hemorrhage, orbital cellulitis) vs. subacute (days — infection, inflammatory) vs. chronic (weeks-months — thyroid, tumor)
  • Pain: severe with infection, hemorrhage, or inflammation; painless suggests tumor or thyroid
  • Vision changes, diplopia
  • Recent trauma or surgery (retrobulbar hemorrhage)
  • Fever (orbital cellulitis, cavernous sinus thrombosis)
  • Recent sinusitis or dental infection (orbital cellulitis)
  • Known thyroid disease
  • Immunosuppression, diabetes (mucormycosis risk)

Physical Exam

  • Visual acuity (each eye) — decreased acuity indicates optic nerve compromise
  • Pupillary exam: RAPD (afferent pupillary defect) indicates optic nerve compression
  • Extraocular movements: restricted in orbital cellulitis, cavernous sinus thrombosis, retrobulbar process
  • Intraocular pressure (IOP measurement) — elevated >40 mmHg with tense orbit suggests retrobulbar hemorrhage
  • Resistance to retropulsion (push gently on closed eyelid — firm/tense orbit is abnormal)
  • Assess for chemosis (conjunctival swelling), periorbital edema, erythema
  • Fundoscopy: look for optic disc edema, retinal vessel pulsations
  • Cranial nerves III, IV, VI (affected in cavernous sinus thrombosis)
  • Nasal exam for black eschar (mucormycosis)

Red Flags

  • Acute onset with vision loss — retrobulbar hemorrhage (needs emergent canthotomy)
  • IOP >40 mmHg with RAPD — retrobulbar hemorrhage
  • Fever + proptosis + pain with eye movement — orbital cellulitis
  • Bilateral proptosis + CN palsies + fever — cavernous sinus thrombosis
  • Immunocompromised + necrotic nasal tissue — mucormycosis
  • Pulsatile proptosis with bruit — carotid-cavernous fistula

Differential Diagnosis

Emergent

Urgent

  • Carotid-cavernous fistula (pulsatile proptosis, orbital bruit, chemosis)
  • Orbital abscess (complication of orbital cellulitis)
  • Orbital hematoma (trauma)

Subacute/Chronic

  • Graves' disease (most common cause of bilateral proptosis; can be unilateral)
  • Orbital tumors (lymphoma, rhabdomyosarcoma in children, meningioma, metastases)
  • Orbital pseudotumor (idiopathic orbital inflammation)
  • Orbital fractures with soft tissue swelling

Periorbital swelling

Proptosis

No proptosis

Lid Complications

Other

Evaluation

Bedside

  • Visual acuity
  • IOP measurement (see Tono-Pen use)
  • Pupillary exam for RAPD
  • Extraocular movements
  • POCUS: may identify retrobulbar hemorrhage or abscess

Imaging

  • CT orbits with contrast (and maxillofacial cuts): primary imaging modality
    • Evaluates for retrobulbar hemorrhage, orbital abscess, sinusitis, fracture, foreign body, mass
    • CT angiography if vascular cause suspected (carotid-cavernous fistula)
  • MRI/MRV: better for cavernous sinus thrombosis, tumor characterization, optic nerve evaluation (non-emergent)

Laboratory

  • CBC, BMP, blood cultures if infection suspected
  • ESR, CRP for inflammatory process
  • TSH, free T4 if Graves' disease suspected
  • HbA1c, glucose if mucormycosis concern (often in DKA patients)
  • Coagulation studies if on anticoagulation

Management

Retrobulbar Hemorrhage

  • Emergent lateral canthotomy and cantholysis — do not delay for imaging if clinical diagnosis is clear (tense orbit, elevated IOP >40, RAPD, vision loss)
  • This is a bedside procedure that can be sight-saving
  • Ophthalmology consultation (but do not delay canthotomy for consult)

Orbital Cellulitis

Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis

  • IV antibiotics (similar to orbital cellulitis)
  • Anticoagulation is controversial; consider hematology consultation
  • ICU admission

Mucormycosis

  • Amphotericin B (liposomal preferred)
  • Emergent ENT consultation for surgical debridement
  • Correct underlying metabolic derangement (DKA)
  • High mortality — aggressive early treatment essential

Graves' Disease

  • If mild: artificial tears, head-of-bed elevation, sunglasses
  • If sight-threatening (compressive optic neuropathy): high-dose IV corticosteroids, urgent ophthalmology
  • Endocrinology referral

Disposition

Admit

  • Retrobulbar hemorrhage (post-canthotomy monitoring)
  • Orbital cellulitis requiring IV antibiotics
  • Cavernous sinus thrombosis (ICU)
  • Mucormycosis (ICU)
  • Any vision-threatening proptosis

Discharge

  • Chronic Graves' ophthalmopathy without acute vision changes — arrange ophthalmology and endocrinology follow-up
  • Mild preseptal cellulitis (NOT orbital) — oral antibiotics with close follow-up in 24-48 hours
  • Return precautions: vision changes, worsening pain, fever, increasing swelling

See Also

References