Uveitis: Difference between revisions
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#Sudden red/painful eye | #Sudden red/painful eye | ||
#Deep pain, worse with eye movement | #Deep pain, worse with eye movement | ||
#Limbic redness ( | #Limbic redness (as opposed to perilimbal sparing seen in conjunctivitis) | ||
#Sluggish pupil | #Sluggish pupil | ||
#Consensual photophobia | #Consensual photophobia | ||
# Cell & flare | #Cell & flare | ||
===Posterior=== | ===Posterior=== | ||
Revision as of 02:11, 26 October 2011
Background
- Uveitis = inflammation of iris, ciliary body, and/or choroid
- Anterior Uveitis
- Inflammation of iris and/or ciliary body
- Types:
- Iritis
- Iridocyclitis
- Posterior uveitis = choroiditis
- Anterior Uveitis
Causes
- Inflammatory
- Associated with HLA B-27
- 50% have associated systemic disease
- Ankylosing spondylitis
- Psoriatic arthritis
- Reactive arthritis
- inflammatory bowel disease
- Sarcoidosis
- Juvenile idiopathic arthritis
- Behcet disease
- Kawasaki disease
- Multiple sclerosis
- Wegener’s granulomatosis
- Traumatic
- Infectious (uncommon)
Workup
- Slit-lamp
- Consider CXR (uveitis often associated with sarcoidosis, TB)
Diagnosis
Anterior
- Sudden red/painful eye
- Deep pain, worse with eye movement
- Limbic redness (as opposed to perilimbal sparing seen in conjunctivitis)
- Sluggish pupil
- Consensual photophobia
- Cell & flare
Posterior
- ‘‘floaters’’
- visual changes
- generally does not cause redness or significant pain.
- blind spots or flashing lights
- Cell & flare
By Type
- Anterior uveitis
- Pain
- Redness (primarily noted at the limbus)
- Constricted pupil
- Posterior uveitis
- Reduced visual acuity
- Floaters
DDx
Treatment
- Infectious
- Treat the underlying infection
- Noninfectious
- Topical Steroid (anterior only)
- Prednisolone 1%
- Mydriatics (sympathomimetics)
- Phenylephrine HCl or Hydroxyamphetamine HBr
- prevent the formation of synechiae
- Cycloplegics
- Relieves pain
- Scopolamine 0.25% OR cyclopentolate 1%
- Topical Steroid (anterior only)
- Ophtho consult within 24 hours
Complications
- Cataracts
- Glaucoma (from synechia)
- Retinal detachment
