Conjunctivitis Disease

BASICS

DESCRIPTION

Inflammation of palpebral and/or bulbar conjunctiva. Pink eye refers to non-Neisseria bacterial conjunctivitis.

  • System(s) affected: Nervous, Skin/Exocrine
  • Genetics:
    N/A
  • Incidence/Prevalence in USA: Unknown, but common
  • Predominant age: Depends on cause
  • Predominant sex: Male = Female
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • General
    • Conjunctival hyperemia
    • Burning
    • Foreign body sensation
    • Pruritus
    • Lacrimation
    • Exudation and matting
    • Chemosis
    • Pseudoptosis
    • Preauricular adenopathy
    • Tarsal plate papillary hypertrophy
    • Tarsal plate lymphoid follicles
    • Pseudomembranous and membranes
    • Photosensitivity
    • Decreased acuity if there is complicating ulcer or keratitis
    • Granulomas (rare)
  • Bacterial
    • Minimal pruritus
    • Moderate tearing
    • Profuse exudate, particularly Neisseria species
    • Usually unilateral (or initially unilateral)
    • Small tarsal plate papillae
    • Neisseria species may cause chemosis
    • Gram and Giemsa stain: Polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN's) and bacteria (gram negative intracellular diplococci with Neisseria species)
  • Viral
    • Minimal pruritus
    • Profuse tearing
    • Minimal exudate
    • Often bilateral
    • Preauricular adenopathy common
    • Subconjunctival hemorrhage (acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis)
    • Associated viral systemic symptom (fever, myalgia, etc.)
    • Tarsal plate follicles
    • Pharyngeal follicles if associated pharyngitis
    • Gram and Giemsa stain: Mononuclear cells (lymphocytes)
    • Rare chemosis except with epidemic keratoconjunctivitis
    • Subepithelial corneal opacities with epidemic keratoconjunctivitis
    • Diffuse punctate corneal fluorescein uptake or dendrites with herpes simplex
    • Typical zoster rash along ophthalmic branch of trigeminal nerve with varicella-zoster blepharoconjunctivitis
    • Typical measles rash, Koplik's spots, etc. with measles
  • Chlamydial
    • Minimal pruritus
    • Moderate to profuse tearing
    • Profuse exudate (sometimes modest)
    • Often bilateral
    • Small tarsal plate papillae
    • Tarsal plate follicles present
    • Gram and Giemsa stain: PMN's, plasma cells, inclusion bodies, in trachoma large palely staining lymphoblastic cells
    • Inclusion conjunctivitis commonly has preauricular adenopathy and large tarsal plate papillae and follicles. Occasionally associated genitourinary symptoms in young adults or history of bilateral conjunctivitis unresponsive to topical antibiotics.
    • Lymphogranuloma venereum is rare and non-follicular (mostly granulomatous conjunctival) with large preauricular node (visible bubo)
    • Trachoma rare in the USA (except American Indians of Southwest) and has 4 clinical stages
  • Allergic
    • Severe pruritus
    • Moderate tearing
    • No exudate
    • Bilateral
    • Chemosis very common
    • Tarsal papillae
    • Gram and Giemsa's stain: Eosinophils and basophils
    • Allergic rhinoconjunctivitis has associated sneezing, rhinitis but if not of sufficient duration will not develop papillae
    • Vernal conjunctivitis is recurrent in warm weather associated with large "cobblestone" papillae in those with history of atopic allergy
    • Giant papillary conjunctivitis has similar appearance to vernal conjunctivitis with less pruritus and is seen in soft (and occasionally hard) contact lens use
  • Chemical or irritative
    • Tarsal follicles with conjunctivitis of topical medications
    • Tearing and exudation depends on toxicity of chemical
    • Chemosis common in post therapeutic irrigation
    • Gram and Giemsa stain: PMN's if tissue necrosis
CAUSES
  • Bacterial
    • Staphylococcus aureus
    • Streptococcus pneumoniae
    • Haemophilus influenzae
    • Neisseria gonorrhoeae
    • Neisseria meningitidis
    • Rarely other Streptococcal sp., pseudomonas, Branhamella catarrhalis, Coliforms, Klebsiella, Proteus, Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Treponema pallidum
  • Viral
    • Adenoviruses types 3, 4, 7 (pharyngitis with conjunctivitis)
    • Adenoviruses types 8 and 19 (epidemic keratoconjunctivitis)
    • Adenovirus 11, Coxsackie A24, enterovirus 70 (acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis)
    • Herpes simplex (primary and recurrent)
    • Coxsackievirus type A28
    • Molluscum contagiosum
    • Varicella
    • Herpes zoster
    • Measles virus
  • Chlamydial
    • Chlamydia trachomatis (trachoma)
  • Allergic
    • Rhinoconjunctivitis (hay fever) - humoral
    • Vernal conjunctivitis
    • Giant papillary conjunctivitis
    • Delayed (cellular)
    • Autoimmune (Sjögren's, pemphigoid, Wegener's granulomatosis)
  • Chemical or irritative
    • Topical medication
    • Home/industrial chemicals
    • Wind
    • Smoke
    • Ultraviolet light
  • Other
    • Rickettsial, fungal, parasitic, tuberculosis, syphilis, Kawasaki disease
    • Thyroid disease, gout, carcinoid, sarcoidosis, psoriasis, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, Ligneous conjunctivitis, Reiter's syndrome
RISK FACTORS

Numerous, including trauma from wind, cold and heat, chemicals and foreign body

DIAGNOSIS

LABORATORY
  • Culture from conjunctiva
  • Gram and Giemsa stain of the discharge or scrapings

Drugs that may alter lab results: N/A
Disorders that may alter lab results: N/A

PATHOLOGICAL FINDINGS
N/A
SPECIAL TESTS
  • Cultivation on HeLa cells and neutralization tests for epidemic keratoconjunctivitis
  • Bovin fixation and Papanicolaou stain for multinucleated giant cells of herpes simplex conjunctivitis. Also available, viral culture and immunofluorescence test for Herpes simplex.
  • Immunofluorescent antibody tests for chlamydia serology
  • Frei test for lymphogranuloma venereum
IMAGING
N/A
DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES
  • Culture of exudate
  • Smear and stain of exudate

TREATMENT

APPROPRIATE HEALTH CARE

Outpatient

GENERAL MEASURES
  • Record acuity
  • Fluorescein staining to detect ulcer, keratitis
  • No patch
  • See Medications
  • Culture
  • No topical steroids
  • Ophthalmologic referral if ulcer, keratitis, suspected herpes or worsens after 24 hours of treatment
  • Compresses - warm if infective, cold if allergic or irritative
  • Remove purulent material and debris (may require frequent irrigation)
  • Giant papillary allergic conjunctivitis requires discontinuing use of contact lenses
SURGICAL MEASURES

N/A

ACTIVITY

No restrictions

DIET

No restrictions

PATIENT EDUCATION
  • Transmission route of infecting agent if contagious
  • Demonstrate eye drop techniques
  • Demonstrate ointment techniques

FOLLOW UP

PREVENTION/AVOIDANCE
  • Avoid listed causes when possible
  • Wash hands frequently
POSSIBLE COMPLICATIONS
  • Bacterial
    • Chronic marginal blepharitis
    • Conjunctival scar if membrane developed
    • Corneal ulcer or perforation
    • Hypopyon
    • Rare portal of entry for meningococcus
  • Viral
    • Corneal scars with herpes simplex
    • Corneal scars, lid scars, entropion, misdirected lashes with Varicella-zoster
    • Bacterial superinfection
  • Chlamydial
    • Clinical trachoma (not with inclusion conjunctivitis)
  • Allergic, chemical and others
    • Bacterial superinfection
EXPECTED COURSE AND PROGNOSIS
  • Bacterial
    • 10-14 days without treatment
    • 2-4 days with treatment
  • Viral
    • 10 days for pharyngitis with conjunctivitis
    • 3-4 weeks for epidemic keratoconjunctivitis
    • 2-3 weeks for Herpes simplex
  • Chlamydial
    • 3-9 months for untreated inclusion conjunctivitis
    • 3-5 weeks for trachoma with treatment

MISCELLANEOUS

ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS

N/A

AGE-RELATED FACTORS

Pediatric: Neonatal conjunctivitis may be toxic, bacterial (genital tract bacteria or nosocomial) or chlamydial
Geriatric: More likely to have diseases or problems listed in Causes
Others: N/A

PREGNANCY

N/A

OTHER NOTES

N/A

ABBREVIATIONS

PMN = polymorphonuclear neutrophils

Clinical Investigations

ROLE OF HOMOEOPATHY

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