Acute suppurative bacterial dacryoadenitis (ASBD) was not reported to occur following severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. We are presenting a unique case of concurrent presumed ASBD with SARS-CoV-2 infection. A 23-year-old previously healthy male presented with right upper eyelid swelling and pain over the lacrimal gland area for 3 days. Before his visit, the patient was tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 infection after experiencing mild flu-like symptoms, despite being vaccinated 2 months ago. He was found to have clinical and radiological features highly suggestive of ASBD with concurrent SARS-CoV-2 infection. He was admitted and initiated on systemic and topical antibiotic, followed by incision and drainage of an abscess collection. The patient showed dramatic clinical improvement with no recurrent signs of infection during the follow-up period. This acute dacryoadenitis is presumed to represent a secondary bacterial infection possibly aided by immune-related factors that may coexist in SARS-CoV-2-positive patients.
Ocular choristomas are rare lesions that have been reported at the conjunctiva, sclera, orbit, or intraocularly with significant potential for visual disturbance. The complex type of choristomas shows a mixture of different cartilaginous, glandular, and muscular tissue in addition to fat. We present a patient with an associated eyelid coloboma and complex choristoma. A 12-day-old baby boy was referred to our hospital with an upper medial eyelid coloboma affecting almost two-thirds of the eyelid length with an additional sub-brow mass since birth. The baby also had secondary findings to the eyelid coloboma defect: temporal conjunctival symblepharon, vascularized cornea, and inferior pannus. The patient underwent an upper eyelid reconstruction with excisional biopsy of the sub-brow mass, which was diagnosed as a complex choristoma. This is the first case of an eyelid coloboma-associated with complex choristoma without any other systemic associations.
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