ambossIconambossIcon

Endophthalmitis

Last updated: July 19, 2024

Summarytoggle arrow icon

Endophthalmitis is a rare, potentially sight-threatening inflammation of the vitreous humor (vitritis) that may be infectious (bacterial/fungal infection) or noninfectious (sterile). Infectious endophthalmitis can have either an exogenous (following ocular surgery/penetrating trauma) or endogenous (hematogenous spread) etiology. Staphylococcal/streptococcal infection after cataract surgery is the most common cause of exogenous bacterial endophthalmitis. Fungal endophthalmitis is often caused by Candida and is more common in immunocompromised individuals. Endophthalmitis may present either acutely with sudden, deep ocular pain and rapidly progressive loss of vision or indolently (chronic endophthalmitis). Clinical features include conjunctival hyperemia, corneal haziness, hypopyon, and decreased visual acuity. Vitreous infiltrates are seen on slit lamp examination. Diagnosis is often clear on history and ocular examination. In doubtful cases, ultrasound of the eye and gram stain and culture of the vitreous humor is indicated. Infectious endophthalmitis is treated with intravitreal injection of either antibiotics (vancomycin with ceftazidime/amikacin) or antifungals (amphotericin B/voriconazole). Surgical removal of the vitreous humor (vitrectomy) is done in sight-threatening cases. Patients with noninfectious endophthalmitis usually resolve completely with topical steroids alone. Untreated infectious endophthalmitis can progress to cause panophthalmitis, corneal rupture, and permanent vision loss.

Icon of a lock

Register or log in , in order to read the full article.

Etiologytoggle arrow icon

Infectious endophthalmitis

Noninfectious endophthalmitis (sterile)

References:[1][2][3][4][5]

Icon of a lock

Register or log in , in order to read the full article.

Clinical featurestoggle arrow icon

Acute vs. chronic endophthalmitis [1][5]
Acute endophthalmitis Chronic endophthalmitis
Pathogen
  • Usually bacterial
Onset
  • Sudden (acute)
  • Insidious
Symptoms
  • Ocular pain is usually absent/appears late.
  • Gradually progressive loss of vision
  • Floaters (fungal endophthalmitis)
Signs
Icon of a lock

Register or log in , in order to read the full article.

Diagnosistoggle arrow icon

Slit lamp examination of the eye

  • Indicated in all patients with endophthalmitis.
  • Cornea: edematous/hazy
  • Chambers containing aqueous humor: hazy; hypopyon
  • Vitreous chamber; : inflammation (cells and protein); white and fluffy infiltrates (snowball appearance) in fungal endophthalmitis

Fundoscopy

Ultrasound of the eye (B-scan)

Gram-stain and culture of aqueous and/or vitreous humor

  • The aqueous and/or vitreous humor can be extracted through a fine needle and cultured.
  • Indicated in doubtful cases

Workup for primary source of infection

References:[1][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]

Icon of a lock

Register or log in , in order to read the full article.

Treatmenttoggle arrow icon

Early initiation of treatment (within hours) is critical to preserve eyesight.References:[13][14][15][16][17]

Icon of a lock

Register or log in , in order to read the full article.

Complicationstoggle arrow icon

  • Panophthalmitis
  • Corneal perforation
  • Phthisis bulbi
  • Glaucoma
  • Permanent loss of vision

References:[18][19]

We list the most important complications. The selection is not exhaustive.

Icon of a lock

Register or log in , in order to read the full article.

Start your trial, and get 5 days of unlimited access to over 1,100 medical articles and 5,000 USMLE and NBME exam-style questions.
disclaimer Evidence-based content, created and peer-reviewed by physicians. Read the disclaimer