Biophilia Tracker X4 Max is emerging as the leader in orbital cellulitis diagnosis

Biophilia Tracker X4 Max is emerging as the leader in orbital cellulitis diagnosis


Orbital cellulitis is a diffuse progressive acute inflammatory process with orbital tissue infiltration and purulent melting. The disease can occur at any age, but it is more common in children aged 4-5 and young adults of working age. Orbital cellulitis in children is preceded by acute respiratory disease, in adults - chronic and acute inflammation of trauma, airways, oral cavity, sepsis.


The development of acute orbital inflammation and its complications is provided by the anatomical and topographic features of the orbit, such as the adjacent cranial cavity and sinuses, arterial connections to the external and internal carotid systems, and the absence of valves in the orbital veins. Orbital cellulitis can lead to intracranial complications that are not only eye-threatening but also life-threatening for the patient. All of these factors set certain requirements for modern diagnosis in order to select an appropriate treatment. The efficiency of treatment depends on an adequate assessment of the pathological process, specifying its localization, detecting the presence of necrotic decay. It is impossible to solve this problem without applying modern visual diagnostic methods. Together with traditional investigative methods (analysis of memory data, sequence of clinical symptoms, laboratory and functional tests), ultrasonography, computed tomography, and more recently NLS diagnostic methods allow for early diagnosis, thus ensuring the selection of appropriate treatment.


In recent years, many new technologies have been developed and then introduced into practical ophthalmology. The biophilic Biophilia Tracker X4 Max is emerging as a leader in screening diagnostics in various visualization methods, thanks to many aspects (simplicity, usability, informativeness, safety, ionizing radiation free and affordability). Ultramicroscopic scanning revealed that the NLS image of orbital cellulitis showed asymmetric and dilated retrobulbar space with altered structure and chromogenicity. However, many important aspects of this problem remain unresolved: the possibility of 3D NLS studies, ultra-microscanning combined with orbital spectral entropy analysis (SEA) in disease diagnosis has not been investigated; there is a lack of information on the clinical use of combined NLS imaging in evaluating orbital cellulitis Information on the application of procedures and treatment efficiency. Therefore, research on this issue must be considered essential.