Purpose: To describe the incidence, duration, and complication rate of patients with a clinical diagnosis of pseudomembranous viral conjunctivitis. Methods: A retrospective observational study is performed compiling the data of patients diagnosed as pseudomembranous conjunctivitis at the hospital’s emergency department from June 2016 to May 2018. Demographic variables, duration of symptoms, and follow-up until resolution of the pseudomembranes and associated complications are collected. Results: The incidence rate of pseudomembranous conjunctivitis is 3.47/10,000 people-year and 0.123% of emergency department consultations. The incidence of pseudomembranous conjunctivitis is approximately 20% of the total adenoviral conjunctivitis, with similar peak incidence rates and annual distribution. The presence of pseudomembranes shows a mean duration of 7.86 days. In this series of pseudomembranous patients, 38.4% had at least one of the following complications: 16.7% subepithelial infiltrates (IC 13.0%–21.1%), 20.81% corneal erosions (SE 0.0218, IC 16.7%–25.5%), 3.5% filamentary keratitis (SE 0.010, IC 1.8%–6.0%), and 6.1% subtarsal fibrosis (SE 0.128, IC 3.8%–9.1%). Conclusion: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate the incidence and rate of complications of pseudomembranous conjunctivitis. Complications occurred in almost 4 out of 10 patients. The mean duration of the follow-up in the ED was higher in patients with any complication compared with non-complicated patients. The high complication rate makes a closely follow-up advisable, until pseudomembrane resolution, to assess possible complications and symptomatic treatment.
Purpose: To assess the incidence of postoperative masticatory oscillopsia after orbital decompression, comparing results between isolated lateral wall and balanced or 3-wall orbital decompression. Methods: An observational retrospective study was performed, involving 161 consecutive patients who underwent orbital decompression between 2008 and 2018. Patients’ clinical data were registered, and archives were revised for data compilation. Patients were divided into 2 groups according to the type of surgery: “lateral” group included patients who underwent isolated lateral wall decompression and “lateral plus” group involved patients with balanced or 3-wall decompression. Exclusion criteria were secondary decompressions, those not including lateral wall and asymmetrical surgeries, so analysis was performed among 131 remaining patients. Oscillopsia was self-reported and was registered as present or not. Diplopia was evaluated according to Paridaens grading system. Results: Statistical analysis among the 131 patients with lateral wall decompression (isolated or in combination) was performed. Seven patients referred oscillopsia, 5 among “lateral” group, while 2 reported oscillopsia on “lateral plus” group (p = 0.001). The authors found no differences on new-onset or worsening of diplopia between groups (p = 1) Conclusions: Oscillopsia was significantly higher after isolated lateral wall decompression than after balanced or 3-wall decompression, while no differences were found between groups according to diplopia status. Transmission of temporal muscle contraction to the orbit seems to be the cause of the oscillopsia. The authors postulate that the absence of orbital floor or medial wall may act as a dampener for the temporalis muscle contractions, allowing the orbital contents to be expanded through them, and avoiding oscillopsia.
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