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Viral conjunctivitis
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Typical Viral Conjunctivitis
Background
- Most common cause of infectious conjunctivitis
 - Often preceded by URI (usually adenovirus)
 
Clinical Features
- 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 perilimbal sparing
 - Chemosis and subconj hemorrhages may be present
 - Preauricular lymphadenitis (adenovirus)
 
Evaluation
- Slit Lamp
- Follicles on inferior palpebral conjunctival
 - Mild, punctate fluorescein staining of cornea (occasional)
- Must differentiate from herpetic dendrite
 
 
 
Clinical diagnosis of conjunctivitis
| Bacterial | Viral | Allergic | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bilateral | 50% | 25% | Mostly | 
| Discharge | Mucopurulent | Clear, Watery | Cobblestoning, none | 
| Redness | Yes | Yes | Yes | 
| Pruritis | Rarely | Rarely | Yes | 
| Additional | Treatment: Antibiotics | Treatment: Hygiene | Seasonal | 
Differential Diagnosis
Conjunctivitis Types
- Viral conjunctivitis
 - Bacterial conjunctivitis
 - Allergic conjunctivitis
 - Caustic keratoconjunctivitis
 
Management
- Artificial tears 5-6x per day
 - Cold compresses
 - Consider topical antibiotic if unable to differentiate from bacterial conjunctivitis
 - Frequent hand-washing (highly contagious)
 
Disposition
- Follow-up with ophtho if worsening or no improvement in 7 days
 
See Also
References
Authors
Ross Donaldson, Jordan Swartz, Kevin Lu, Neil Young, Daniel Ostermayer

