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Periorbital cellulitis



Periorbital cellulitis
Classification & external resources
ICD-10 L01.1
ICD-9 xxx
DiseasesDB 31304
MedlinePlus 000976
eMedicine emerg/415  oph/206

Periorbital cellulitis, also known as preseptal cellulitis, is an inflammation and infection of the eyelid and portions of skin around the eye. It may be caused by breaks in the skin around the eye, and subsequent spread to the eyelid; infection of the sinuses around the nose (sinusitis); or from spread of an infection elsewhere through the blood.

Contents

Characteristics

Periorbital cellulitis must be differentiated from orbital cellulitis, which is an emergency and requires intravenous (IV) antibiotics. In contrast to orbital cellulitis, patients with periorbital cellulitis do not have bulging of the eye (proptosis), limited eye movement (ophthalmoplegia), pain on eye movement, and loss of vision. If any of these features is present, one must assume that the patient has orbital cellulitis and begin treatment with IV antibiotics. CT scan may be done to delineate the extension of the infection.

Causes

Staphylococcus and streptococcus species are commonly implicated. The advent of the Haemophilus influenzae vaccine has dramatically decreased the incidence of periorbital and orbital cellulitis.

See also

References

  • Donahue S, Schwartz G (1998). "Preseptal and orbital cellulitis in childhood. A changing microbiologic spectrum". Ophthalmology 105 (10): 1902-5; discussion 1905-6. PMID 9787362.
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Periorbital_cellulitis". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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