Canaliculitis: difficulties in diagnosis, differential diagnosis and comparison between conservative and surgical treatment.
Ophthalmologica. 1994; 208(6):314-7.O

Abstract

The most important clinical features of canaliculitis include a red, swollen eyelid in the area of the affected canaliculus, a unilateral conjunctivitis, a mucopurulent discharge and in some cases dacryoliths visible in the lacrimal punctum. Conservative therapy was found to be little effective: only 10% of the patients could be cured, 40% showed a recurrence after conservative treatment. 20 patients (50%) were treated by canaliculotomy: 16 of these were cured by this surgical treatment, 4 patients complained of epiphora, although diagnostic syringing showed free lacrimal pathways. The surgical treatment of canaliculitis in combination with conservative therapy yields far better results than conservative therapy alone.

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Authors+Show Affiliations

Vécsei VP
2nd Department of Ophthalmology, Vienna, Austria.
Huber-Spitzy V
No affiliation info available
Arocker-Mettinger E
No affiliation info available
Steinkogler FJ
No affiliation info available

MeSH

AdultAgedAged, 80 and overAnti-Bacterial AgentsBacteriaCombined Modality TherapyDacryocystitisDiagnosis, DifferentialDrug Therapy, CombinationEye Infections, BacterialEye Infections, FungalFemaleFungiHumansLacrimal ApparatusMaleMiddle AgedRecurrenceRetrospective Studies

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

7845646