1 / 45

A Case of Eye Pain and Confusion

A Case of Eye Pain and Confusion. Daniel G. Murphy, MD, FACEP Vice Chair & Medical Director Maimonides Medical Center Brooklyn, New York. First ED Visit: Late Friday Night. 24 yo female with headache for 2 weeks, worse over the last 2 days 104/76, 80, 18, 98.1F

amity
Download Presentation

A Case of Eye Pain and Confusion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Case of Eye Pain and Confusion Daniel G. Murphy, MD, FACEP Vice Chair & Medical Director Maimonides Medical Center Brooklyn, New York

  2. First ED Visit: Late Friday Night • 24 yo female with headache for 2 weeks, worse over the last 2 days • 104/76, 80, 18, 98.1F • Right frontal forehead, sharp, non-radiating, constant but waxing/waning, worse when she moved. • (+) nausea • (-) fever, photophobia, neck pain or visual changes

  3. Past Medical/Social History • No recent trauma • Smoker 1 PPD • Social drinker • No hx of headaches, except for last 2 weeks • No allergies • No meds except ibuprofen and acetaminophen recently – not helpful • Worked as a part-time sales clerk

  4. Exam: First Visit • Alert, oriented, looked well except for discomfort of headache • Face normal, Perrl, EOMI, fundi normal, TMs normal, mastoids non-tender, neck supple, motor neuro exam normal, normal gait, mental status normal

  5. ED Therapy and Work Up • Prochlorperazine 10 mg, by vein Acetaminophen 325/Oxycodone 5, orally • CBC, Chem 7, UCG, CT Head without contrast

  6. ED Diagnostic Results: Visit 1 • WBC count 12.4K • CT head reviewed by ED attending and radiology resident as negative

  7. ED Disposition: Visit 1 • Patient’s pain responded to medications • Patient discharged with prescription for acetaminophen/butalbital/caffeine = Fioricet

  8. Radiology Over-Read: Monday AM(2.5 days since 1st ED visit) • Opacification of the right ethmoid and right sphenoid sinuses with expansion of the sphenoid septations toward the left. • No intracranial disease

  9. ED Discrepancy Procedure • Patient was contacted by phone and informed of sinus problem on CT • Patient went to her PMD that afternoon • PMD discharged her with prescription for levofloxacin

  10. 2nd ED Visit: Tuesday Morning(3.5 days after 1st ED visit) • New onset swelling and severe pain around left eye • Continued, worsening right-sided headache • Slept poorly, confused, hallucinating? • 100/80, 96, 18, 101.9F

  11. Morning Exam: 2nd Visit • Left peri-orbital edema, erythema, proptosis, chemosis, severe pain with EOMs. Left pupil reacted to light. • Ambulated in with normal gait. No obvious motor deficits. • Awake. Followed simple commands, but mildly confused, answering slowly or incorrectly, with difficulty concentrating. • (+) Nuchal rigidity

  12. ED Therapy & Work Up • 2 grams ceftriaxone by vein after cultures • Repeat CT of brain and sinuses with contrast • LP • ID and ENT consults; vancomycin and metronidazole given by vein • Admitted to MICU

  13. Afternoon Exam: 2nd Visit • Deteriorating mental status. • Mild left sided weakness left upper and left lower extremities.

  14. ED Admitting Diagnoses • Orbital Cellulitis • Meningitis • Rule out Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis

  15. Septic Dural Sinus ThrombosisSuppurative Intracranial Thrombophlebitis • Infected venous thrombosis of cortical veins or sinuses • From meningitis, subdural empyema, epidural abscess, infection in the skin of the face, paranasal sinuses, middle ear, mastoid, maxillary teeth or neck. • Iatrogenic cases have been associated with rhinoplasty, hip surgery and oral/dental surgery.

  16. Non-Septic Dural Sinus Thrombosis • Dehydration from vomiting • Hypercoagulable states • Immunologic abnormalities, including the presence of circulating antiphospholipid antibodies

  17. Septic Dural Sinus Thrombosis • Rare; 155 reported cases since 1940 • Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis (CST) is the predominant subset (62%?) • Fulminant, aggressive disease: mortality CST =30%, superior sagittal sinus thrombosis =78% • Morbidity CST: 50% cranial nerve deficit; 17% visually impaired

  18. Infected Thrombus Pathogens • CST: Staphylococcus aureus, other gram-positive organisms, and anaerobes. • Lateral Sinus (otitis media and/or mastoid infection) Proteus species, Escherichia coli, S. aureus, and anaerobes. • Superior Sagittal Sinus (meningitis or air sinus infection) - Streptococcus pneumoniae, S. aureus, other streptococci, and Klebsiella species.

  19. ED Presentation: Superior Sagittal Sinus Thrombosis • Headache, nausea and vomiting, confusion, and focal or generalized seizures. • Rapid development of stupor and coma. • Weakness of the lower extremities with bilateral Babinski signs or hemiparesis is often present.

  20. ED Presentation: Transverse Sinus Thrombosis • Headache and earache. • Gradinego's syndrome: otitis media, sixth nerve palsy, and retro-orbital or facial pain. • Sigmoid sinus and internal jugular vein thrombosis may present with neck pain.

  21. ED Presentation: Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis • Sinusitis, midface infection for 5-10 days. • Fever, headache, malaise, retro-orbital pain and diplopia, which generally precede….. • Ptosis, proptosis, chemosis, eyelid edema, peri-orbital edema and extraocular dysmotility due to deficits of cranial nerves III, IV, and VI. • Hypo- or hyperesthesia of the ophthalmic and maxillary divisions of V, decreased corneal reflex. dilated, tortuous retinal veins and papilledema. • Meningeal signs: nuchal rigidity, Kernig and Brudzinski signs.

  22. Diagnostic Studies • CBC, diff, cultures • Sinus Films, CT, MR, MR Venography, Venous phase cerebral angiogram • LP

  23. ED Management • Antibiotics: S aureus is the usual cause, broad-spectrum coverage for gram-positive, gram-negative, and anaerobic organisms also, pending cultures. • Drain primary source of infection, if feasible (eg, sphenoid sinusitis, facial abscess). • Anticoagulation in carefully selected cases of septic cavernous-sinus thrombosis, not other forms of septic dural-sinus thrombosis. • Urokinase or rtPA? • Corticosteroids?

  24. Consults • ENT • Neurology • ID • Intensive Care

  25. Outcome of Case • Day 1: Seizure, worsening deficit, intubated • Day 2: Heparinized, transient neuro improvement then relapse. • Day 5: Sinuses drained • Day 6: Brain dead • Day 19: Demise

More Related