Facial swelling: Difference between revisions
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==Management== | ==Management== | ||
* | *Airway first — if any concern for airway compromise, prepare for difficult airway management | ||
* | *[[Angioedema]]: [[epinephrine]], antihistamines, steroids; if ACE inhibitor-related, icatibant or C1 esterase inhibitor concentrate; see [[Angioedema]] | ||
* | *Odontogenic/dental abscess: I&D, antibiotics, dental follow-up | ||
* | *Deep space neck infection: IV antibiotics, CT imaging, ENT/oral surgery consultation for possible operative drainage | ||
* | *[[Ludwig's angina]]: Emergent airway management, IV antibiotics, surgical consultation | ||
* | *[[Orbital cellulitis]]: IV antibiotics, ophthalmology consultation, consider surgical drainage if subperiosteal abscess | ||
* | *[[Periorbital cellulitis]]: Oral or IV antibiotics depending on severity | ||
* | *Traumatic: Manage per fracture type; ice, elevation, pain control | ||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
* | *Admit: Deep space infection, Ludwig's angina, orbital cellulitis, angioedema with airway concern, any case requiring IV antibiotics or surgical intervention | ||
* | *Discharge: Isolated periorbital cellulitis (mild), simple dental abscess after I&D, resolved angioedema with outpatient follow-up | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
Latest revision as of 09:35, 22 March 2026
Background
- Facial swelling in the ED requires rapid assessment to identify potentially life-threatening causes
- The primary concern is airway compromise — conditions like angioedema, Ludwig's angina, and deep space neck infections can progress to airway obstruction
- Anatomic location and timing of onset guide the differential
Clinical Features
- Key history: onset (minutes = allergic; hours-days = infectious; chronic = neoplastic), location, trauma, dental history, medications (ACE inhibitors), allergies, associated symptoms (fever, dysphagia, trismus)
- Red flags:
- Stridor, voice changes, drooling → impending airway compromise
- Floor of mouth swelling/tongue elevation → Ludwig's angina
- Lip/tongue/periorbital swelling without urticaria → angioedema
- Trismus → deep space infection
- Periorbital swelling with ophthalmoplegia/proptosis → orbital cellulitis
- Physical exam:
- Assess airway patency first
- Palpate for fluctuance (abscess), crepitus (necrotizing infection, or dental/orbital wall fracture)
- Intraoral exam for floor of mouth elevation, dental caries, gingival swelling
- Eye exam if periorbital involvement
Differential Diagnosis
Facial Swelling
- Buccal space infections
- Dental problems
- Canine space infection
- Facial cellulitis
- Herpes zoster
- Masticator space infections
- Maxillofacial trauma
- Neoplasm
- Parapharyngeal space infection
- Salivary gland diagnoses
- Parotitis
- Ranula
- Sialoadenitis
- Sialolithiasis
- Superior vena cava syndrome
Evaluation
- CT face/neck with IV contrast — for suspected abscess, deep space infection, or orbital cellulitis
- CT maxillofacial without contrast — for suspected fracture
- Labs: CBC, BMP, blood cultures if septic
- If angioedema suspected: consider tryptase level (to differentiate from anaphylaxis), C4 level, C1 esterase inhibitor level (outpatient)
- Dental panorex or dedicated dental imaging for suspected odontogenic source
Management
- Airway first — if any concern for airway compromise, prepare for difficult airway management
- Angioedema: epinephrine, antihistamines, steroids; if ACE inhibitor-related, icatibant or C1 esterase inhibitor concentrate; see Angioedema
- Odontogenic/dental abscess: I&D, antibiotics, dental follow-up
- Deep space neck infection: IV antibiotics, CT imaging, ENT/oral surgery consultation for possible operative drainage
- Ludwig's angina: Emergent airway management, IV antibiotics, surgical consultation
- Orbital cellulitis: IV antibiotics, ophthalmology consultation, consider surgical drainage if subperiosteal abscess
- Periorbital cellulitis: Oral or IV antibiotics depending on severity
- Traumatic: Manage per fracture type; ice, elevation, pain control
Disposition
- Admit: Deep space infection, Ludwig's angina, orbital cellulitis, angioedema with airway concern, any case requiring IV antibiotics or surgical intervention
- Discharge: Isolated periorbital cellulitis (mild), simple dental abscess after I&D, resolved angioedema with outpatient follow-up
See Also
- Angioedema
- Ludwig's angina
- Periorbital cellulitis
- Orbital cellulitis
- Facial paralysis
- Dental problems
- Parotitis
