Bilateral red eyes

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Background

Eye anatomy.
  • This page describes a general approach to the complaint of bilateral red eyes[1]
  • Bilateral red eye is more suggestive of a systemic or non-infectious process compared to unilateral red eye
  • Most common cause is bilateral viral conjunctivitis (often starts unilateral, becomes bilateral in 24-48 hours)
  • Key EM considerations: differentiate benign conjunctivitis from sight-threatening or systemic causes
  • Bilateral conjunctival injection without exudate is a criterion for Kawasaki disease in children

Clinical Features

History

  • Onset and progression (simultaneous vs. sequential)
  • Type of discharge: watery (viral, allergic), purulent (bacterial), mucoid (allergic)
  • Itching (suggests allergic etiology)
  • Pain, photophobia (suggests deeper inflammation — scleritis, uveitis, keratitis)
  • Vision changes (requires urgent evaluation)
  • Contact lens use (bilateral keratitis)
  • Recent URI (adenoviral conjunctivitis)
  • Medication use (topical agents can cause bilateral toxic/allergic reaction)
  • Systemic symptoms: joint pain (reactive arthritis), rash, fever (systemic disease)
  • Seasonal pattern (allergic conjunctivitis)
  • Chemical or irritant exposure
  • Dry eye symptoms

Physical Exam

  • Visual acuity (each eye separately) — must be normal in simple conjunctivitis[2]
  • Type of injection: diffuse (conjunctivitis), ciliary flush (iritis, acute glaucoma)
  • Pupil size and reactivity (irregular/fixed pupil = iritis or glaucoma)
  • Discharge character
  • Lid/periorbital edema
  • Preauricular lymphadenopathy (viral conjunctivitis)
  • Fluorescein staining (dendritic lesions = herpes, corneal abrasions)
  • Evaluate for systemic findings: joint swelling (reactive arthritis), oral ulcers, rash

Red Flags

  • Decreased visual acuity
  • Photophobia + pain (not just irritation)
  • Fixed or irregular pupils
  • Ciliary flush (limbal injection)
  • Contact lens wearer with pain and redness → corneal ulcer until proven otherwise
  • Bilateral non-exudative conjunctival injection + fever in child → consider Kawasaki disease

Differential Diagnosis

Bilateral red eyes

Common

  • Viral conjunctivitis (adenovirus — most common; highly contagious)
  • Allergic conjunctivitis (bilateral itching, watery discharge, seasonal)
  • Dry eye syndrome
  • Chemical/irritant exposure

Systemic Disease-Associated

  • Reactive arthritis (Reiter syndrome — conjunctivitis + urethritis + arthritis)
  • Kawasaki disease (bilateral non-exudative, pediatric)
  • Stevens-Johnson syndrome / toxic epidermal necrolysis (bilateral conjunctivitis with skin involvement)
  • SLE (episcleritis/scleritis)
  • Inflammatory bowel disease (episcleritis, uveitis)
  • Thyroid eye disease (Graves' — may have bilateral injection with proptosis)

Infectious

  • Gonococcal conjunctivitis (hyperacute, profuse purulent discharge — emergency)
  • Chlamydial conjunctivitis (chronic follicular conjunctivitis)
  • Bilateral herpes keratitis (rare — consider immunocompromised)

Evaluation

Bedside

  • Visual acuity (each eye)
  • Fluorescein exam with slit lamp or Wood's lamp
  • Pupillary exam
  • IOP if glaucoma suspected

Laboratory

  • Not needed for typical viral or allergic conjunctivitis
  • Conjunctival swab for culture/Gram stain if: hyperacute purulent discharge, neonatal, not responding to treatment, concern for gonococcal
  • Consider CBC, ESR/CRP if systemic disease suspected
  • STI testing if reactive arthritis or gonococcal conjunctivitis suspected

Management

Viral Conjunctivitis

  • Supportive care: cool compresses, artificial tears
  • Strict hygiene education (highly contagious for 10-14 days)
  • No topical antibiotics needed

Allergic Conjunctivitis

  • Cool compresses
  • Topical antihistamine/mast cell stabilizer drops (olopatadine, ketotifen)
  • Oral antihistamines for systemic symptoms
  • Avoid known allergens

Bacterial Conjunctivitis

  • Topical antibiotic drops (polymyxin B-trimethoprim, erythromycin ointment)
  • Gonococcal: systemic ceftriaxone + frequent saline irrigation + ophthalmology consultation

Systemic Disease

  • Kawasaki disease: see Kawasaki disease protocol (IVIG + aspirin)
  • Stevens-Johnson: admit, ophthalmology consultation, stop offending drug
  • Reactive arthritis: NSAIDs, STI treatment if indicated

Disposition

Discharge (Most Patients)

  • Viral conjunctivitis with reassurance and hygiene education
  • Allergic conjunctivitis with treatment
  • Return precautions: vision changes, worsening pain, photophobia, not improving in 7-10 days

Emergent Ophthalmology

  • Gonococcal conjunctivitis
  • Stevens-Johnson syndrome with ocular involvement
  • Suspected bilateral keratitis

See Also

Eye Algorithms

References

  1. Cronau H, Kankanala RR, Mauger T. Diagnosis and management of red eye in primary care. Am Fam Physician. 2010 Jan 15;81(2):137-44. PMID 20082509
  2. Leibowitz HM. The red eye. N Engl J Med. 2000 Aug 3;343(5):345-51. PMID 10922425