Orbital Conditions & Surgery

The orbit (eye socket) is a complex bony cavity housing the globe, six extraocular muscles, optic nerve, and lacrimal gland. Disease here can threaten both vision and life.

Orbital Conditions

Inflammatory

Orbital Inflammatory Disease

Non-infectious inflammation affecting the orbital tissues, ranging from self-limited to systemic disease.

  • Idiopathic orbital inflammation (pseudotumor)
  • IgG4-related orbital disease
  • Orbital sarcoidosis
  • Granulomatosis with polyangiitis
Full guide →
Neoplastic

Orbital Tumors

Benign and malignant masses arising within or spreading into the orbit — diagnosis guides surgical approach.

  • Cavernous hemangioma (venous malformation)
  • Orbital lymphoma
  • Meningioma & nerve sheath tumors
  • Rhabdomyosarcoma (pediatric)
  • Metastatic orbital disease
Full guide →
Thyroid

Thyroid Eye Disease

Graves' orbitopathy — an autoimmune condition causing proptosis, diplopia, and sight-threatening optic nerve compression.

  • Proptosis (exophthalmos) & periorbital swelling
  • Restrictive myopathy & diplopia
  • Exposure keratopathy
  • Orbital decompression surgery
  • Eyelid retraction & strabismus repair
Full guide →

FDA-approved biologic therapy available:

Tepezza (teprotumumab) medication guide →
Trauma

Orbital Trauma

Blowout fractures and orbital injuries — timely evaluation prevents long-term diplopia and enophthalmos.

  • Blowout fractures (floor & medial wall)
  • Orbital wall repair
  • Retrobulbar hematoma
  • Traumatic optic neuropathy
Full guide →

When to Seek Urgent Evaluation

These findings require same-day or emergency ophthalmologic evaluation. Do not wait for a routine appointment.

  • Sudden or progressive vision loss
  • Proptosis (bulging eye) developing over days
  • Painful restriction of eye movement
  • Fever with orbital swelling (possible orbital cellulitis)
  • Ptosis with dilated pupil (possible CN III palsy)
  • Pulsatile proptosis with bruit (possible carotid-cavernous fistula)

Orbital Anatomy at a Glance

Volume~30 mL

The adult orbit holds roughly 30 mL of tissue — fat, muscle, nerve, and globe

Walls4 walls

Roof (frontal bone), floor (maxilla/zygoma), medial (ethmoid/lacrimal), lateral (zygoma/sphenoid)

ApexOptic canal

The orbital apex transmits the optic nerve and ophthalmic artery through the optic canal, plus cranial nerves III, IV, V1, and VI through the superior orbital fissure

Fat~7 g

Orbital fat cushions and supports the globe; loss (e.g. from aging or radiation) causes enophthalmos

Muscles6 EOMs

Six extraocular muscles rotate the globe: four recti (superior, inferior, medial, lateral) and two obliques

SeptumKey barrier

The orbital septum divides preseptal from postseptal space — the critical divider in orbital vs. periorbital infection

For a full interactive anatomy guide, see the Orbital Anatomy page.

Diagnostic Approach

1

History & Examination

  • Onset and tempo (acute vs. chronic vs. intermittent)
  • Pain, proptosis, diplopia, vision change
  • Systemic symptoms (weight loss, night sweats, sinusitis, thyroid disease)
  • Exophthalmometry — measures globe protrusion in mm
  • Forced duction test — distinguishes restrictive from neurogenic diplopia
2

Imaging

  • CT orbit (bone windows) — first-line; best for fractures, calcified lesions, sinus disease
  • MRI orbit (fat-suppressed T1 + T2, gadolinium) — best for soft tissue characterization, nerve involvement, intracranial extension
  • CT chest/abdomen — staging for lymphoma, sarcoidosis, metastatic disease
  • PET-CT — systemic disease activity, lymphoma staging
3

Laboratory & Biopsy

  • CBC, CMP, LDH — lymphoma screen
  • TSH, T4, TRAb — thyroid eye disease
  • ANCA (c- and p-) — granulomatosis with polyangiitis
  • IgG4 serum — IgG4-related orbital disease
  • ACE, lysozyme — sarcoidosis
  • Orbital biopsy — when imaging and labs are non-diagnostic; usually anterior orbitotomy under local anesthesia

Find an Orbital Surgery Specialist

Oculoplastic surgeons have specialized training in orbital anatomy, imaging interpretation, and surgical approaches — from anterior orbitotomy to orbital decompression.

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