Inflammatory condition of the lacrimal gland
Aetiology
Infectious Causes
- Bacterial
- Staphylococcus aureus (most common)
- Streptococcus species
- Haemophilus influenzae
- Viral
- Epstein–Barr virus (EBV)
- Mumps virus (most common)
- Influenza virus
- Herpes simplex virus (HSV)
- Mycobacterial and Fungal (rare)
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Fungal organisms in immunocompromised patients
Non-Infectious Causes
- Inflammatory / Autoimmune
- Sarcoidosis
- Sjögren syndrome
- IgG4-related disease
- Granulomatosis with polyangiitis
- Systemic Diseases
- Thyroid eye disease (rare involvement)
Clinical presentation
Symptoms
- Acute onset of pain in the superolateral orbit
- Swelling of the upper eyelid
- Redness and warmth over the lacrimal gland region
- Epiphora
- Fever and malaise (especially in infectious cases)
Signs
- Tender, firm swelling in the superotemporal orbit
- S-shaped ptosis of the upper eyelid
- Conjunctival injection overlying the gland
- Restricted ocular motility in severe cases
- Possible bilateral involvement in systemic disease

Investigations
Clinical Evaluation
- Detailed history (onset, systemic symptoms, recurrence)
- Complete ophthalmic examination including visual acuity and ocular motility
- Anel Test positive
Laboratory Studies
- Complete blood count (CBC)
- Inflammatory markers (ESR, CRP)
- Viral serology (e.g., EBV) when indicated
- Autoimmune markers (ANA, ANCA, serum IgG4) in chronic or bilateral cases
Imaging
CT or MRI of the orbit to assess gland enlargement, abscess formation, or orbital involvement
Biopsy
- Indicated in:
- Chronic or recurrent dacryoadenitis
- Atypical presentations
- Suspected neoplastic or IgG4-related disease
Management
Acute Infectious Dacryoadenitis
- Systemic broad-spectrum antibiotics (tailored to suspected organism)
- Analgesics and anti-inflammatory agents
- Hospitalization if severe or systemic involvement is present
Viral Dacryoadenitis
- Supportive care
- Antivirals if indicated (e.g., HSV)
Non-Infectious / Autoimmune Dacryoadenitis
- Systemic corticosteroids (after excluding infection)
- Immunosuppressive therapy for refractory or systemic disease
- Management of underlying systemic condition