Conjunctivitis: Difference between revisions

Line 6: Line 6:


===Types===
===Types===
#[[Viral conjunctivitis]]
*[[Viral conjunctivitis]]
#[[Bacterial conjunctivitis]]
**[[Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus]]
#[[Allergic conjunctivitis]]
**[[HSV Conjunctivitis]]
#[[Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus]]
*[[Bacterial conjunctivitis]]
#[[HSV Conjunctivitis]]
**[[Gonorrheal Conjunctivitis]]
#[[Gonorrheal Conjunctivitis]]
**[[Chlamydia Conjunctivitis]]
#[[Chlamydia Conjunctivitis]]
*[[Allergic conjunctivitis]]
#[[Caustic Keratoconjunctivitis]]
*[[Caustic Keratoconjunctivitis]]


==Differential Diagnosis==
==Differential Diagnosis==

Revision as of 15:42, 26 January 2015

Background

  • Most common cause of acute red eye
  • Viral infection is usual etiology
  • Injected conjunctiva w/ perilimbal sparing
  • Rarely painful; more irritated

Types

Differential Diagnosis

Conjunctivitis
Bacterial Viral Allergic
Bilateral 50% 25% Mostly
Discharge Mucopurulent Clear, Watery Cobblestoning, none
Redness Yes Yes Yes
Pruritis Rarely Rarely Yes
Additional Tx: Abx Tx: Hygiene Seasonal

Treatment

  • Viral infections - most common cause of conjunctivitis, but difficult to differentiate viral from bacterial
  • Many clinicians treat all presentations as bacterial conjunctivitis
    • Eye redness, lid swelling, crusting of the eye in the morning and drainage
    • Pain, loss of vision and photophobia should not be present.
  • Ointments - soothing effect
    • Interfere with vision
  • Drops - no interference with vision.
  • Corticosteroids and eye patching - exacerbate the infections


See Also

Source

  • Mahmood, Narang. Diagnosis & management of acute red eye. Emerg Med Clin N Am 2008;26
  • Tintinalli