Definition & Causes - Scleral Siege
- Definition: Severe, destructive scleral inflammation with scleral thinning, necrosis; risk of perforation. Intense, boring pain is hallmark.
- Types:
- Necrotizing with inflammation: Acutely painful.
- Necrotizing without inflammation (Scleromalacia Perforans): Often painless; typically in longstanding Rheumatoid Arthritis.
- Primary Associations:
- Systemic Autoimmune (most common, ≈50-60%):
- Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)
- Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis (GPA)
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)
- Relapsing Polychondritis
- Infectious (rare): Herpes Zoster, TB, Syphilis.
- Surgically-induced: Post-operative.

- Systemic Autoimmune (most common, ≈50-60%):
⭐ Most common association of necrotizing scleritis is with systemic autoimmune diseases, particularly Rheumatoid Arthritis.
Clinical Picture - Eye on Fire
- Pain: Severe, boring, deep ocular pain.
- Radiates: Temple, jaw, sinuses.
- Nocturnal: Characteristically awakens patient at night.
- Redness: Intense, violaceous, "beefy-red" diffuse or nodular congestion; non-blanching with topical phenylephrine.
- Photophobia, lacrimation.
- ↓ Vision: Often progressive, can be severe.
- Scleral Appearance:
- Thinning: Sclera may appear translucent, revealing underlying bluish uvea.
- Avascular patches: Indicative of necrosis.
- High risk of scleral melt and perforation.
- Commonly associated with systemic autoimmune diseases (e.g., Rheumatoid Arthritis, GPA, SLE).

⭐ The hallmark symptom is severe, boring ocular pain that may radiate to the temple, jaw, or sinuses, and characteristically awakens the patient at night.
Diagnosis & Workup - Unmasking the Culprit

- Slit-lamp Exam: Confirms scleral thinning, edema, avascular patches, and inflammation. Note extreme pain.
- Imaging:
- B-scan Ultrasonography: Assesses posterior involvement, scleral thickness.
- Ultrasound Biomicroscopy (UBM): Details anterior scleral changes.
- Systemic Evaluation (Crucial):
- Inflammatory markers: ESR, CRP.
- Autoantibodies: RF, anti-CCP, ANCA, ANA.
- Chest X-ray; consider infectious screen (e.g., syphilis, TB).
⭐ B-scan ultrasonography is invaluable for assessing posterior scleritis, scleral thickness, and associated fluid or choroidal detachment.
Complications & Outlook - Danger Zone
- Scleral thinning → melt → perforation (esp. scleromalacia perforans)
- Uveitis (anterior/posterior), PUK, glaucoma, cataract
- Retinal detachment, choroidal effusion, optic neuropathy
- Severe, irreversible vision loss; globe deformity, phthisis bulbi
- Outlook: Guarded. Requires prompt, aggressive immunosuppression.
- High morbidity; mortality risk if systemic vasculitis untreated.
⭐ Scleral perforation is a dreaded complication, especially in the 'scleromalacia perforans' variant, leading to potential globe rupture and severe vision loss.
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Treatment Strategy - Quelling the Flames
- Primary Goal: Arrest inflammation, alleviate pain, prevent scleral melt & vision loss.
- Cornerstone: Prompt, aggressive systemic immunosuppression.
⭐ Aggressive systemic immunosuppression (e.g., corticosteroids combined with cyclophosphamide or biologic agents) is the mainstay of treatment for necrotizing scleritis to prevent visual loss and systemic complications.
- Initial Regimen:
- Systemic Corticosteroids: High-dose (e.g., IV Methylprednisolone pulse, then oral Prednisolone 1-1.5 mg/kg/day).
- PLUS Immunosuppressive agent: Cyclophosphamide (IV or oral), Methotrexate, Azathioprine, Mycophenolate.
- Refractory/Severe Disease:
- Biologic agents (e.g., Infliximab, Adalimumab, Rituximab).
- ⚠️ Avoid: Topical steroids alone (ineffective, risk masking perforation).
- Surgery: Reserved for complications (e.g., tectonic scleral patch graft for perforation).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Most severe and destructive scleritis, often causing significant visual loss.
- Strong association with systemic autoimmune diseases (e.g., Rheumatoid Arthritis, ANCA-vasculitis).
- Intense, boring, constant pain, often worse at night and radiating.
- High risk of scleral thinning, staphyloma, and globe perforation.
- Requires prompt, aggressive systemic immunosuppression (corticosteroids, cytotoxic agents).
- Scleromalacia perforans: a specific painless necrotizing variant in long-standing Rheumatoid Arthritis.
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