Da Cryo Cystitis
Da Cryo Cystitis
Da Cryo Cystitis
• Occurs in 3 form :
▫ Acute : patients experience severe morbidity dan rarely
mortality. Morbidity is related primarily to the lacrimal sac
abscess and spread of the infection
▫ Chronic : The primary morbidity is associated with chronic
tearing, mattering, and conjunctival inflammation and
infection
▫ Congenital : is a very serious disease associated with
significant morbidity and mortality. If not treated promptly
and aggressively, newborn infants can experience orbital
cellulitis (because the orbital septum is formed poorly in
infants), brain abscess, meningitis, sepsis, and death.
Lacrimal passages –consist of
Physiology
• Epiphora is defined as the sign of overflow of tears, and may
be caused by the following:
1 Hypersecretion secondary to ocular inflammation or surface
disease. In these cases watering is associated with symptoms of
the underlying cause and treatment is usually medical.
2 Defective drainage due to compromise of the lacrimal
drainage system. It may be caused by:
a Malposition of the lacrimal puncta (e.g. secondary to
ectropion).
b Obstruction along the lacrimal drainage system, from the
puncta to the nasolacrimal duct.
c Lacrimal pump failure, which may occur secondarily to
lower lid laxity or weakness of the orbicularis muscle (e.g. facial
nerve palsy).
Evaluation
• External examination
2. Lacrimal sac
1 The puncta and eyelids
• Fluorescent disappearance testing: A somewhat
subjective test, it is used to assess the
disappearance of fluorescein dye when placed in
the eye. The ocular surface is evaluated at the slit
lamp to determine disappearance of the
fluorescein dye. This test is useful in children.
• With the Jones I dye test, functional and anatomical
obstruction of the nasolacrimal system can be assessed.
▫ A positive result indicates no anatomical or functional
blockage to tear flow.
▫ A negative result indicates a lacrimal drainage system
problem (ie, anatomical or functional blockage).
• A Jones II dye test is used to determine the presence or
absence of anatomical obstruction of the nasolacrimal
outflow system. A positive Jones II dye test (colored fluid
from the nose) indicates a patent system anatomically.
• In light of a negative Jones I dye test, a positive Jones II
dye test indicates either partial obstruction of the
nasolacrimal system or a false-negative Jones I test.
• If no fluid can be irrigated with the Jones II test,
complete nasolacrimal obstruction is present.
Clinical findings
• Edema and erythema with
distension of the lacrimal sac
below the medial canthal
tendon
• The degree of discomfort
ranges none to severe pain
• it occurs more commonly in women.
• Age 40-60 years age group.
• There may be pooling of tears near the media
canthus.
• On pressure over the sac there may be a mucoid
or mucopurulent reguritation through the
puncta or more rarely it passes down the nose.
• There may be a non tender swelling
Radiographic feature
• CT scans are useful in patients
suspected of dacryocystitis.
• The typical finding is a
wellcircumscribed round
lesion that is centered at the
lacrimal fossa and that
demostrates peripheral
enhancement
• MRIs are not as useful as CT scans but can be
helpful in differentiating cystic lesions from solid
mass lesions
• Dacryocystography (DCG) and dacryoscintigraphy
are useful adjunctive diagnostic modalities when
anatomical abnormalities of the nasolacrimal
drainage system are suspected.
Dacryoscintigraphy