Viral conjunctivitis

Revision as of 18:33, 25 October 2011 by Jswartz (talk | contribs)

Background

  • Most common etiology is adenovirus

Clinical Features

  • Often preceded by URI
  • 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 perilimbic sparing
  • Chemosis and subconj hemorrhages may be present

Diagnosis

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

DDx

Eye Algorithm (Main)

Treatment

  1. Artificial tears 5-6x per day
  2. Cold compresses
  3. Consider topical abx if unable to differentiate from bacterial conjunctivitis
  4. Frequent hand-washing (highly contagious)

Disposition

  • Follow-up with ophtho if worsening or no improvement in 7 days

See Also

Source

  • Tintinalli
  • Mahmood AR, Narang AT. Diagnosis and management of the acute red eye. Emerg Med Clin N Am. 2008;26:35-55.