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orbital cellulitis/fever

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A case of orbital pseudotumor masquerading as orbital cellulitis in a patient with proptosis and fever.

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Bilateral Subperiosteal Suppuration of the Orbit during Scarlet Fever, due to Ethmoidal Suppuration (Orbital Cellulitis).

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Young man with fever and eye pain. Orbital cellulitis.

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Septic Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis Associated With Orbital Cellulitis: A Report of 6 Cases and Review of Literature.

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OBJECTIVE To describe risk factors, clinical parameters, treatment, and prognosis for patients with septic cavernous sinus thrombosis presenting with orbital cellulitis. METHODS Retrospective case series of 6 patients identified with septic cavernous sinus thrombosis and orbital cellulitis confirmed

Factors Associated With Increased Risk of Pediatric Orbital Cellulitis-Who Should Be Scanned?

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Evaluation of a child with POC/OC is complicated due difficulties in physical examination and risks of imaging by computed tomography.Retrospective review of children 0-16 years admitted to the pediatric emergency department for POC/OC from 2009 to

Fatal orbital cellulitis with intracranial complications: a case report.

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Orbital cellulitis is a relatively uncommon presentation in the emergency department, but orbital cellulitis complicated by intracranial extensions, loss of vision, and death has rarely been reported in the literature.We report a 40-year-old Pakistani

Aeromonas hydrophila orbital cellulitis in a patient with myelodysplastic syndrome.

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Orbital cellulitis caused by Aeromonas hydrophila developed in a 73-year-old male with a history of myelodysplastic syndrome. He was admitted because of fever, general malaise, pain as well as periorbital swelling in the right eye. Four days later, a yellowish pustule with purulent material was

Manifestations of fungal cellulitis of the orbit in children with neutropenia and fever.

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OBJECTIVE To delineate clinical manifestations of fungal orbital cellulitis in immunocompromized patients. METHODS The charts of 7 pediatric patients with fungal orbital cellulitis treated at a tertiary children's cancer hospital were reviewed retrospectively for histologically confirmed fungal

[Senegalese experience of orbital cellulitis].

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OBJECTIVE To show the etiological, clinical, and epidemiological aspects of orbital cellulitis at the ophthalmological clinic of A. le Dantec hospital. METHODS This is a retrospective study conducted from January 1994 to October 2003. Sixty-eight patient records were used. We noted patients' civil

Orbital cellulitis presenting as a first sign of incomplete kawasaki disease.

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A 6-year-old boy was referred to our hospital with orbital cellulitis. He had a history of 7 days of fever despite antibiotherapy. At first, he only had pharyngitis and conjunctivitis, but then an orbital mass evolved which restricted the movement of his right eye and there was also periorbital

Orbital cellulitis in children: clinical analysis of 16 cases.

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Orbital cellulitis, defined as eyelid erythema and edema, proptosis and/or ophthalmoplegia, with or without visual acuity loss, is a rare, but severe infectious disease. The medical records were reviewed of 16 children, aged 18 years or under, who were admitted at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital with a

[Bacteremia on femoral catheter infection: an unusual cause of orbital cellulitis].

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The authors report a case of orbital cellulitis complicating bacteremia on central catheter infection. A 51-year-old man, with a history of diabetes and end-stage renal disease, was admitted for left exophthalmos with inflammatory chemosis, fever, and worsening of his general state. The CT scan

Natural killer/T-cell lymphoma masquerading as orbital cellulitis.

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We describe 3 cases of natural killer/T-cell lymphoma that presented by masquerading as orbital cellulitis. All of the patients were examined for pain, fever, proptosis, and motility restriction. Computed tomography of the orbits and sinuses revealed orbital soft-tissue swelling without focal

Neutrophilic eccrine hidradenitis simulating orbital cellulitis.

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Orbital swelling in patients with cancer can reflect neoplastic or infectious processes. Accurate diagnosis can be especially difficult in the face of associated fever and neutropenia. We treated a 30-year-old man undergoing induction chemotherapy for acute myelogenous leukemia, who had fever of

[Orbital cellulitis in children].

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BACKGROUND Because the potential for complications is great, orbital cellulitis must be recognized promptly and treated aggressively. METHODS The files of 38 children admitted from 1988 to 1993 because of orbital or periorbital cellulitis were retrospectively analyzed. Clinical findings included
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