Viral conjunctivitis: Difference between revisions

 
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==Background==
==Background==
*Most common cause of infectious conjunctivitis
*Most common cause of infectious conjunctivitis in adults<ref>Johnson D, et al. "Does This Patient With Acute Infectious Conjunctivitis Have a Bacterial Infection" The Rational Clinical Examination Systematic Review. JAMA.2022;327(22):2231-2237. doi:10.1001/jama.2022.7687</ref>
*Often preceded by [[URI]] (usually [[adenovirus]])
*Often preceded by [[URI]] (usually [[adenovirus]])
{{Conjunctivitis DDX}}


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==
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==Differential Diagnosis==
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{Conjunctivitis DDX}}
{{Unilateral red eye DDX}}
{{Bilateral Red Eyes}}


==Evaluation==
==Evaluation==

Latest revision as of 17:05, 4 February 2026

Background

  • Most common cause of infectious conjunctivitis in adults[1]
  • Often preceded by URI (usually adenovirus)

Conjunctivitis Types

Clinical Features

Conjunctivitis with limbus sparing
Viral conjunctitivis lateral view with limbus sparing.
  • Complaint of "red eye" with mild-moderate, watery discharge
  • Usually painless unless there is some degree of keratitis
  • Often one eye will be involved initially with other eye involved within days
  • Unilateral or bilateral conjunctival injection with perilimbal sparing
  • Chemosis and subconjunctival hemorrhages may be present
  • Preauricular lymphadenitis (adenovirus)

Differential Diagnosis

Unilateral red eye

^Emergent diagnoses
^^Critical diagnoses


Bilateral red eyes

Evaluation

  • Slit lamp
    • Follicles on inferior palpebral conjunctival
    • Mild, punctate fluorescein staining of cornea (occasional)
      • Must differentiate from herpetic dendrite

Clinical diagnosis of conjunctivitis^

Conjunctivitis
Bacterial Viral Allergic
Bilateral 50% 25% Mostly
Discharge Mucopurulent Clear, Watery Cobblestoning, none
Redness Yes Yes Yes
Pruritis Rarely Rarely Yes
Increased Likelihood Presence of mucopurulent discharge; otitis media Concomitant pharyngitis; an enlarged preauricular node; contact with another person with red eye NA
Additional Treatment: Antibiotics Treatment: Hygiene Seasonal

Management

  1. Artificial tears 5-6x per day
  2. Naphazoline/pheniramine 0.025%/0.3% drops 4x daily
  3. Cold compresses
  4. Consider topical antibiotic if unable to differentiate from bacterial conjunctivitis
  5. Frequent hand-washing (highly contagious)

Disposition

  • Follow-up with ophtho if worsening or no improvement in 7 days
  • Viral conjunctivitis is highly contagious. Patients may return to work or school after discharge from eye(s) has resolved. Advise good hygiene practices and avoid close contact with very old, very young, or other immunocompromised individuals.

See Also

References

  1. Johnson D, et al. "Does This Patient With Acute Infectious Conjunctivitis Have a Bacterial Infection" The Rational Clinical Examination Systematic Review. JAMA.2022;327(22):2231-2237. doi:10.1001/jama.2022.7687