Red eye (peds)

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Background

Eye anatomy.
  • This page describes a general approach to the complaint of eye redness for pediatric patients[1]
  • Red eye is extremely common in pediatrics — the vast majority is caused by viral conjunctivitis
  • Key EM considerations: distinguish benign causes from sight-threatening or systemic diseases
  • Neonatal conjunctivitis (ophthalmia neonatorum) requires special attention due to gonococcal and chlamydial etiologies
  • Consider non-accidental trauma in any child with unexplained eye findings

Clinical Features

History

  • Age of child (neonatal conjunctivitis has specific pathogens by timing)
  • Unilateral vs. bilateral
  • Duration of symptoms
  • Type of discharge: watery (viral, allergic), purulent (bacterial), mucopurulent
  • Associated symptoms: fever, URI symptoms, ear pain, photophobia, pain
  • Contact with sick individuals (viral conjunctivitis is highly contagious)
  • Seasonal pattern (allergic conjunctivitis)
  • Trauma history, foreign body exposure
  • Contact lens use (in adolescents — corneal ulcer risk)
  • Neonatal: maternal STI history, prophylaxis received

Physical Exam

  • Visual acuity (age-appropriate testing) — decreased acuity is a red flag
  • Pupillary exam
  • Extraocular movements
  • Pattern of injection: diffuse (conjunctivitis), ciliary flush/limbal injection (iritis, glaucoma)
  • Type of discharge
  • Lid swelling, chemosis
  • Corneal clarity (cloudy cornea = concerning for keratitis or glaucoma)
  • Fluorescein staining (corneal abrasion, dendrites of herpes keratitis)
  • Preauricular lymphadenopathy (viral conjunctivitis, chlamydia)

Red Flags

  • Neonatal purulent discharge (gonococcal ophthalmia — can perforate cornea within hours)
  • Decreased visual acuity
  • Photophobia + pain (iritis, keratitis)
  • Cloudy cornea (glaucoma, keratitis)
  • Fixed/irregular pupil (iritis, glaucoma)
  • Periorbital swelling with restricted eye movements (orbital cellulitis)
  • Dendritic pattern on fluorescein (herpes keratitis — do NOT use steroids)
  • Hypopyon (layered white cells in anterior chamber — endophthalmitis, severe iritis)

Neonatal Conjunctivitis by Timing

  • Day 1: chemical conjunctivitis (from erythromycin prophylaxis) — self-limited
  • Day 2-5: Neisseria gonorrhoeae — emergent, can rapidly perforate
  • Day 5-14: Chlamydia trachomatis — most common infectious cause of neonatal conjunctivitis
  • Day 6-14: Herpes simplex virus — vesicles, keratoconjunctivitis

Differential Diagnosis

Infectious

  • Viral conjunctivitis (adenovirus most common — bilateral watery discharge, preauricular LAD)
  • Bacterial conjunctivitis (purulent discharge, H. flu, S. pneumo, Moraxella)
  • Gonococcal ophthalmia neonatorum (hyperacute, profuse purulent discharge in neonate)
  • Chlamydial conjunctivitis (neonate or sexually active adolescent)
  • Herpes keratitis (dendritic ulcer on fluorescein)
  • Corneal ulcer (contact lens users)
  • Orbital cellulitis (lid swelling, proptosis, restricted EOM)
  • Preseptal cellulitis (lid swelling, but normal EOM and vision)

Non-Infectious

  • Corneal abrasion and foreign body (tearing, pain, fluorescein uptake)
  • Allergic conjunctivitis (bilateral itching, watery, seasonal)
  • Chemical/irritant exposure
  • Iritis/uveitis (photophobia, pain, ciliary flush)
  • Congenital/infantile glaucoma (epiphora, photophobia, cloudy/enlarged cornea)
  • Kawasaki disease (bilateral non-exudative conjunctivitis with other features)
  • Subconjunctival hemorrhage (traumatic or spontaneous — benign)
  • Non-accidental trauma (unexplained subconjunctival hemorrhage, retinal hemorrhages)

Unilateral red eye

^Emergent diagnoses
^^Critical diagnoses


Bilateral red eyes

Evaluation

Bedside

  • Visual acuity (age-appropriate)
  • Fluorescein exam with Wood's lamp or slit lamp: rule out corneal abrasion, dendrites (herpes keratitis), corneal ulcer
  • Pupillary exam
  • IOP measurement if concern for glaucoma (tonometry)

Laboratory/Cultures

  • Not routinely needed for typical viral or bacterial conjunctivitis
  • Neonatal conjunctivitis: Gram stain and culture of discharge (specifically request for N. gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia), chlamydia NAAT
  • Culture if: neonatal, severe/hyperacute, not responding to empiric therapy, suspected gonococcal

Management

Viral Conjunctivitis (Most Common)

  • Supportive care: cool compresses, artificial tears
  • Highly contagious — hand hygiene education, avoid sharing towels
  • No antibiotics needed (self-limited in 1-2 weeks)
  • Consider erythromycin ointment if unable to distinguish from bacterial

Bacterial Conjunctivitis

  • Topical antibiotic drops or ointment: erythromycin ointment, polymyxin B-trimethoprim drops
  • Ointment preferred in younger children (easier to apply)

Neonatal Conjunctivitis

  • Gonococcal: emergent — ceftriaxone 25-50 mg/kg IV/IM (max 125mg) single dose; frequent saline irrigation; ophthalmology consultation
  • Chlamydial: oral erythromycin 50 mg/kg/day divided QID x 14 days (topical alone insufficient — risk of chlamydial pneumonia)
  • HSV: IV acyclovir, ophthalmology consultation

Herpes Keratitis

  • Ophthalmology referral — do NOT prescribe topical corticosteroids (worsens herpes keratitis)
  • Topical antivirals (trifluridine, ganciclovir gel)
  • See Herpes keratitis

Other

Disposition

Emergent Ophthalmology Consultation

  • Gonococcal ophthalmia neonatorum
  • Herpes keratitis
  • Corneal ulcer
  • Suspected orbital cellulitis
  • Congenital glaucoma

Discharge (Most Patients)

  • Viral conjunctivitis with return precautions
  • Mild bacterial conjunctivitis with topical antibiotics
  • Corneal abrasion with close follow-up
  • Allergic conjunctivitis
  • Return precautions: worsening redness, increased pain, decreased vision, sensitivity to light, swelling around the eye, high fever

See Also

Eye Algorithms

External Links

References

  1. Winters S, Frazier W, Winters J. Conjunctivitis: Diagnosis and Management. Am Fam Physician. 2024 Aug;110(2):134-144. PMID 39172671