Abstract

Panophthalmitis is the most extensive ocular involvement in endophthalmitis with inflammation in periocular tissues. Severe inflammation of the anterior and posterior segments is frequently accompanied by corneal opacity, scleral abscess, and perforation or rupture. Enucleation or evisceration was the only remaining viable treatment option when all options to salvage the eye had been exhausted. The purpose of this retrospective study is to examine the outcomes of patients with endogenous bacterial panophthalmitis, no light perception and scleral abscess who were treated with multiple intravitreal and periocular injections of antibiotics and dexamethasone. Evaluation included spreading of infection to contiguous or remote sites, following evisceration or enucleation, and sympathetic ophthalmia. Eighteen patients were diagnosed with EBP, with liver abscesses in eight patients, retroperitoneal infection in four, pneumonia in two, infective endocarditis in one, cellulitis in one, drug abuse in one, and mycotic pseudoaneurysm in one. Culture results were positive for Klebsiella pneumoniae in 12 patients, Streptococcus spp. in three, Pseudomonas aeruginosa in one, Escherichia coli in one, and Staphylococcus aureus in one. The average number of periocular injections was 2.2, and the average number of intravitreal injections was 5.8. No eye required evisceration or enucleation and developed the spreading of infection to contiguous or remote sites during the follow-up. No sympathetic ophthalmia was observed in the fellow eye of all patients. Prevention of evisceration or enucleation in patients with EBP, NLP and scleral abscess can be achieved by multiple intravitreal and periocular injections of antibiotics and dexamethasone.

Highlights

  • Panophthalmitis is the most extensive ocular involvement in endophthalmitis with inflammation in periocular tissues

  • Three patients were excluded because the interval of onset between primary infectious sources identified and endophthalmitis was more than 14 days

  • Panophthalmitis is a severe type of endophthalmitis

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Summary

Introduction

Panophthalmitis is the most extensive ocular involvement in endophthalmitis with inflammation in periocular tissues. Because of a relatively high extrusion rate and the potential for sympathetic ophthalmia in the other eye, enucleation had been recommended [2,9,10]. Evisceration with either delayed or immediate implant placement has been recommended in patients with endophthalmitis [5,6,7,8]. Attempts at implant placement with evisceration are typically abandoned during surgery because the implant is considered unlikely to remain within the necrotic sclera [6]. Melting of the scleral necrotic tissue causes a high extrusion rate of the orbital implant

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