Interactive Transcript
0:00
This was a young woman who developed painful,
0:05
irritated left eye after an insect bite on the face.
0:11
As we scroll through these scans,
0:13
you note that they are performed with contrast
0:16
administration. For infectious inflammatory conditions,
0:20
we give intravenous contrast on the CT scans.
0:24
In this situation,
0:27
what we see with regard to the left eye is swelling of
0:31
the eyelid as well as swelling of the
0:35
sclera and cornea of the left eye.
0:40
And that cornea is somewhat irregular in its contour.
0:45
You also note that the patient has a fluid
0:48
collection superficial to the cornea.
0:54
This collection is seen as showing a border of contrast
1:00
enhancement as well as a small area
1:04
of edema within the collection.
1:07
Whenever we have air in an orbital collection,
1:10
we worry about polymicrobial disease and this is treated
1:14
much more aggressively than if it's a single staphylococcus
1:19
or staphylococcal epidymitis infection. In this case,
1:22
the inflammation remains anterior to the posterior
1:28
segment of the globe and it also remains
1:32
anterior to the orbital septum.
1:36
This would be termed preseptal cellulitis and the other
1:41
term that is used is periorbital cellulitis.
1:47
Periorbital cellulitis is distinguished from orbital
1:51
cellulitis or postseptal cellulitis depending
1:55
upon whether the orbital septum is involved.
1:59
The orbital septum is a dense,
2:01
fibrous tissue which inserts on the tarsal plates of the
2:05
eyelids and it prevents anterior infections from
2:10
infiltrating the retrobulbar space of the orbit.
2:16
So let's scroll these images and make sure that the
2:19
orbital fat is not involved in the intraconal space.
2:23
So as we look here, we have a nice,
2:26
clean optic nerve and the fat in the retrobulbar
2:30
compartment looks fine compared to the contralateral
2:34
side and there is no involvement
2:36
of the postseptal space.
2:39
So this patient we would characterize as having
2:42
periorbital cellulitis with a periorbital or lid abscess
2:49
for which the patient is likely to have intravenous
2:52
antibiotic therapy. Without the abscess,
2:56
one would simply have periorbital cellulitis.
3:00
Periorbital cellulitis is a diagnosis that is made in
3:04
the emergency room and is treated with oral antibiotics
3:07
as an outpatient that's to be contrasted with
3:11
orbital cellulitis. For orbital cellulitis,
3:14
the patient is generally admitted for at least 24 hours
3:18
of intravenous antibiotics because of the risk of
3:22
involvement of the optic nerve sheath complex
3:26
and potential infectious optic neuropathy.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.