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  Vol. 118 No. 7, July 2000 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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 •Endophthalmitis
 •Pediatric Ophthalmology
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Endophthalmitis After Pediatric Strabismus Surgery

Franco M. Recchia, MD; Caroline R. Baumal, MD; Arunan Sivalingam, MD; Robert Kleiner, MD; Jay S. Duker, MD; Tamara R. Vrabec, MD

Arch Ophthalmol. 2000;118:939-944.

Objective  To report 6 cases of endophthalmitis after pediatric strabismus surgery.

Methods  Retrospective review of initial signs, clinical findings, treatment, culture results, and visual and anatomical outcomes in 6 eyes of 6 children treated at 2 tertiary care institutions between 1983 and 1998.

Results  Four boys and 2 girls aged 8 months to 6 years (median age, 2 years) developed lethargy and asymmetric eye redness, with or without eyelid swelling or fever, within 4 days of surgery. At diagnosis (median, postoperative day 6) clinical findings included periorbital swelling, redness and leukocoria due to vitritis, and, in some cases, hypopyon. Treatment included pars plana vitrectomy and intravitreal and systemic antibiotics in all cases. Vitreous cultures grew Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and Staphylococcus aureus. Within 6 months of strabismus surgery, visual acuity was no light perception in all eyes and 3 eyes had been enucleated. The 3 remaining eyes were prephthisical.

Conclusions  Endophthalmitis after pediatric strabismus surgery is rare. Children may not recognize or verbalize symptoms. Causative organisms are virulent. Visual and anatomical outcomes are poor. Lethargy, asymmetric eye redness, eyelid swelling, or fever in the postoperative period, even if initial postoperative examination results are normal, should prompt urgent ocular examination. The diagnosis of endophthalmitis may be made when biomicroscopic or indirect ophthalmoscopic examination confirms the presence of vitreous opacification with or without hypopyon.


From the Wills Eye Hospital, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pa; and the New England Eye Center, Boston Mass (Drs Baumal and Duker).


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