Orbital Inflammatory Disease
Non-infectious orbital inflammation encompasses a spectrum of conditions — from idiopathic pseudotumor to systemic autoimmune diseases — each requiring a distinct diagnostic and treatment approach.
Idiopathic Orbital Inflammation (Orbital Pseudotumor)
Idiopathic orbital inflammation (IOI), historically called orbital pseudotumor, is the most common cause of painful orbital disease in adults. It is a diagnosis of exclusion — a non-granulomatous, non-specific inflammatory process with no identifiable local or systemic cause. The acute form presents dramatically with rapid-onset periorbital pain, swelling, proptosis, and restricted eye movement. Bilateral involvement or a chronic, sclerosing pattern should prompt thorough investigation for systemic disease.
Subtypes by Anatomic Location
Dacryoadenitis
Lacrimal gland inflammation — S-shaped ptosis, tender swelling under the outer brow. Most common subtype.
Myositis
One or more extraocular muscles inflamed and enlarged. Painful eye movement, often mimics thyroid eye disease but muscles include the tendon.
Anterior (scleritis/perineuritis)
Affects the anterior orbit, sclera, or optic nerve sheath. May mimic orbital cellulitis.
Apical
Inflammation at the orbital apex. High risk of optic nerve compression and vision loss; requires urgent treatment.
