Ophthalmology Flashcards

(250 cards)

1
Q

What are cataracts?

A
  • opacification/clouding of the lens
  • prevents light from reaching back of eye
  • most common cause of blindness worldwide
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2
Q

What is the epidemiology of cataracts?

A
  • incidence increases with age - mostly over 65
  • more common in women
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3
Q

What are risk factors for cataracts?

A
  • diabetes
  • steroid use
  • smoking
  • trauma
  • UV exposure
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4
Q

Nuclear cataracts:
- what
- epidemiology
- symptoms

A
  • caused by sclerosis of lens nucleus
  • common in old age
  • symptoms: myopia, dull colours
  • e.g. patients previously needed reading glasses, no longer require
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5
Q

What are the three parts of the lens relevant to cataracts?

A
  1. lens nucleus: middle aspect
  2. lens cortex: outer aspect
  3. lens capsule: membrane surrounding lens
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6
Q

What are cortical cataracts? What is seen on ophthalmoscopy?

A
  • opacification of lens cortex
  • vision unaffected
  • look like wheel spokes around edge of lens on ophthalmoscopy
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7
Q

What are posterior subscapular cataracts?
- cause, symptoms

A
  • opacifications of posterior aspect of lens
  • affect younger patients/steroid use
  • pts complain of glare when looking at light
  • progress rapidly
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8
Q

What are symptoms of cataracts?

A
  • progressive blurring of vision
  • glare/halos when looking at lights
  • colours appear dull
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9
Q

What is seen on examination of cataracts?

A
  • reduced red reflex
  • clouded lens
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10
Q

What are dot opacities?

A
  • early, localised marker of lens change
  • precede cataracts
  • also seen in diabetics and myotonic dystrophy
  • can classify cataract type based on location
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11
Q

What investigations are done for cataracts?

A
  • ophthalmoscopy
  • slit lamp examination
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12
Q

What is the conservative management of cataracts?

A
  • refrain from surgery until lifestyle affected
  • if age related, prescribe stronger glasses or use brighter lighting
  • control risk factors
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13
Q

What is the surgical management of cataracts?

A
  • phacoemulsification with an intraocular lens implant
  • opacified lens broken down using USS, fragments aspirated
  • new lens implanted
  • ocular biometry to choose replacement lens
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14
Q

What are complications of cataracts surgery?

A
  • posterior capsule opacification
  • endophthalmitis
  • retinal detachment
  • posterior capsule rupture
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15
Q

What is posterior capsule opacification?

A
  • patients present months to years later complaining cataracts returning
  • treated with capsulotomy
  • hole made for light to pass through
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16
Q

What is endophthalmitis?

A
  • infection of aqueous or vitreous humour
  • can result in permanent blindness
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17
Q

What are the common causes of endophthalmitis? exogenous, endogenous and bacteria

A
  • exogenous: surgery or injection
  • endogenous: endocarditis
  • bacteria: Staph or Strep
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18
Q

How does endophthalmitis present?

A
  • severe pain
  • rapidly progressive visual loss
  • photophobia
  • floaters if injection/surgery <6 weeks ago
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19
Q

What may be seen on examination of endophthalmitis?

A
  • Diffuse conjunctival injection
  • Corneal haze, limited view of the pupil and iris
  • Hypopyon
  • Relative afferent pupillary defect
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20
Q

How is endophthalmitis managed?

A
  • ophthalmic emergency
  • surgical intervention
  • sampling of vitreous fluid followed by injection of intravitreal abx
  • Patients admitted for topical and systemic therapy with close monitoring.
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21
Q

What is age related macular degeneration (ARMD)?

A
  • degeneration of central retina (macula)
  • degeneration of retinal photoreceptors
  • results in formation of drusen
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22
Q

What are risk factors for ARMD?

A
  • age (3x inc for pts over 75)
  • smoking
  • FHx
  • htn, dyslipidaemia, diabetes
  • ethnicity
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23
Q

What is dry ARMD?

A
  • atrophic
  • non-exudative and non-neovascular
  • drusen in Bruch’s membrane
  • changes to retinal pigmentary epithelium
  • slow visual deterioration
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24
Q

What is wet ARMD?

A
  • formation of choroidal neovascular membrane made up of new blood vessels
  • leakage of shroud fluid and blood > rapid vision loss
  • rapid progression
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25
Which hormone causes wet ARMD?
- vascular endothelial growth factor
26
What are the symptoms of ARMD?
- progressive, central visual loss - difficulty with dark adaptation - fluctuations in vision - photopsia and glare
27
What is seen on examination of ARMD?
- central metamorphopsia on Amsler grid - central scotoma on visual field assessment
28
What is seen on fundoscopy in ARMD?
- demarcated red patches: sub retinal fluid leakage - drusen - choroidal neovascular membrane
29
How can suspected neovascular ARMD be investigated?
- fluorescein angiography: guides anti-VEGF therapy - can be complemented with indocyanine green angiography to visualise deeper choroidal vessels
30
What is the initial investigation for ARMD?
- slit-lamp microscopy - identifies pigmentary, exudative or haemorrhagic changes - accompanied by colour fundus photography
31
What is OCT?
- ocular coherence tomography - high res 3D imaging of retina - assesses thickness of layers and presence of fluid
32
How is dry ARMD treated?
- low vision refractory aids - AREDS2: vitamins if early
33
What vitamins comprise the AREDS2 formula for early dry ARMD?
- zinc - vitamins A, C, E
34
Which risk factors should be controlled for treatment of ARMD?
- smoking - ocular sun exposure - CV health and diet
35
How can wet ARMD be treated?
- intravitreal anti-VEGF therapy - given monthly for 3 mo - stabilises or improves visual loss
36
What are examples of intravitreal anti-VEGF medications?
- aflibercept - ranibizumab - bevacizumab - pegaptanib
37
Can people with ARMD drive?
- if their visual acuity is 6/12 or better - failure to meet this: patient inform DVLA and stop driving
38
What are other non medical management strategies for ARMD?
- register with national centre for the blind - regular eyesight testing - OT - psychology
39
What are possible complications of intravitreal injections?
- chemosis (oedema) - scleral injection (bloodshot) - Endophthalmitis and infection
40
What is acute angle-closure glaucoma?
- acute rise in intraocular pressure - narrowing of anterior chamber angle of eye (between iris and cornea) - causes optic nerve damage and sight loss
41
What is the pathophysiology of AACG?
- rise in IOP 2º to impaired aqueous outflow - occurs in anatomically predisposed individuals - reduced drainage mediated by pupillary block: iris and lens in contact causing iris to bow forward > inc IOP - *iris blocks trabecular meshwork so aqueous humour can't drain*
42
What ophthalmic factors are predisposing to AACG?
- hypermetropia/short eyeball - pupillary dilatation - lens growth - shallow anterior chamber
43
What are risk factors for AACG?
- age (60s-70s) - female - east asian - FHx - anatomical
44
What are the causes of pupil mid-dilation? (precipitates pupillary block, can lead to AACG)
- caused by dark room - medications: anticholinergics, antidepressants, pupil dilators
45
What are symptoms of AACG?
- develops over hours to days - unilateral severe eye pain or headache - n+v - dec visual acuity or loss - rainbow haloes around bright lights
46
What are signs of AACG on examination?
- red, hard eye - diffuse, hazy cornea - fixed, non-reactive, mid-dilated pupil - hard eye on palpation
47
How is AACG investigated?
- gonioscopy - tonometry
48
What is tonometry? What is the value in AACG?
- measures IOP - is >30mmHg in AACG
49
What is gonioscopy?
- gold standard for AACG - lens for slit lamp - allows visualisation of angle between iris and cornea
50
What is conservative management of AACG?
- oral analgesics - antiemetics - lie patient on back
51
What is acute medical management of AACG?
- acetazolamide - timolol: β blocker - topical steroids: reduce inflammation - brimonidine: α 2 agonist - (pilocarpine eye drops - in textbook less in practice)
52
What is brimonidine and how does it work?
- α 2 agonist - reduces aqueous humour production and increases outflow
53
Patients taking which medications should avoid brimonidine?
- Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) - tricyclic antidepressants
54
What is timolol and how does it work?
- β blocker - reduces aqueous humour production
55
What is definitive management of AACG?
- bilateral laser peripheral iridotomy - laser hole through peripheral iris allows aqueous drainage - decreases intraocular pressure - bilateral because other eye can be affected
56
What is blepharitis?
- inflammation of eyelid margins
57
What causes blepharitis? Give a cause Give a derm condition it is more common in
- Meibomian gland dysfunction: secrete oil to prevent tear film evaporation, so blockage > dry eye - seborrhoeic dermatitis/staph infection - more common with rosacea
58
What are features of blepharitis?
- bilateral - gritty, itchy, dry eye - sticky - red margins - swollen eyelid if staph
59
What can blepharitis lead to?
- styes and chalazions - secondary conjunctivitis
60
What is the management of blepharitis?
- soften lid margin with hot compress 2x day - lid hygiene: cotton buds and baby shampoo - artificial tears if needed
61
What is central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO)?
- sudden occlusion of artery supplying inner retina - leads to hypoperfusion, hypoxic damage, retinal cell death and visual loss
62
What are the 2 categories of aetiology of CRAO?
- embolism/thrombosis (atherosclerosis) - arteritis (vasculitic)
63
What are features of CRAO?
- sudden, painless unilateral visual loss - relative afferent pupillary defect - cherry red spot on pale retina
64
How to differentiate CRAO and BRAO?
- pale area of retina in BRAO - whole retina pale in CRAO
65
What ophthalmic investigations could be used to confirm CRAO?
- fluroscein angiography - OCT
66
What other investigations can be done for CRAO if an embolic cause is suspected?
- carotid duplex USS (may have carotid bruit) - ECG for AF/paroxysmal - Echo
67
What bloods can be done for CRAO?
- ESR/CRP - temporal/GCA - FBC - coagulation studies - HbA1c and lipids - vasculitic screen
68
What is the aim of CRAO management?
- optical emergency - re-perfuse ischaemic tissue - urgent referral
69
What are immediate management options for CRAO?
- ocular massage - inc blood oxygen and dilate retinal arteries: administer sublingual isosorbide dinitrate - reduce IOP: IV acetazolamide and mannitol; anterior chamber paracentesis
70
What is a treatment option for CRAO for patients presenting within 24h?
- intra-arterial fibrinolysis: local injection of urokinase or thrombolysis with tPA (alteplase) - evidence is mixed
71
What is primary open angle glaucoma?
- most common type - optic neuropathy with raised IOP
72
What is normal IOP?
10-21mmHg
73
What is the pathophysiology of POAG?
- gradual inc in resistance to flow through trabecular meshwork into Canal of Schlemm - inc IOP leads to retinal cell ganglion death - loss of nerve axons leads to optic disc cupping - this leads to visual loss
74
What are risk factors for POAG?
- myopia - age over 65 - FHx - Afro caribbean - htn - T2DM
75
What are the features of POAG?
- insidious onset - peripheral visual field loss (superior > inferior) > central - dec visual acuity
76
What is seen on fundoscopy in POAG?
- optic disc cupping - optic disc pallor - vessel bayonetting: breaks as they disappear into the cup, reappearing in base - cup notching - disc haemorrhages
77
Why might there be optic disc pallor in POAG?
- optic nerve atrophy - death of nerve fibres gives pale disc
78
What cup to disc ratio is seen in POAG?
- >0.7 - normal is 0.4-0.7 - loss of disc substance widens and deepens cup
79
How is POAG picked up and referred?
- found by optometrist in routine check - referred to ophthalmology
80
What is the gold standard investigation for POAG?
- measuring IOP - with Goldman applanation tonometer - measures pressure needed to indent cornea over surface area - non-contact less accurate
81
What other investigations may be done for POAG?
- perimetry: visual field assessment - slit lamp with pupil dilatation: optic nerve assessment - central corneal thickness
82
What is seen on gonioscopy in POAG?
- open angle - trabecular meshwork visible - measures peripheral anterior chamber
83
Which investigations do nice guidelines state diagnose chronic open angle glaucoma?
- automated perimetry: visual fields - slit lamp w/ pupil dilatation: optic nerve - applanation tonometry: IOP - gonioscopy - central corneal thickness
84
What is the aim of POAG treatment?
- reduce IOP - prevents progression of optic nerve damage - preserve sight
85
What is the first line treatment of POAG?
- 360º selective laser trabeculoplasty - if IOP ≥24mmHg - causes rebuilding of meshwork - can delay need for eye drops - may need 2nd procedure later date
86
What is the second line treatment for POAG and give an example?
- prostaglandin analogue eyedrops - latanoprost
87
How do PGA eyedrops work?
- increase uveoscleral outflow - OD administration - side effects: brown iris pigmentation - increased eyelash length - eyelid pigmentation
88
What are 3rd line treatments for POAG?
- β blocker eye drops - carbonic anhydrase inhibitor eyedrops - sympathomimetic eyedrops
89
What is the surgical intervention given in POAG?
- trabeculectomy surgery - creating channel in sclera to drain aqueous humour
90
How do carbonic anhydrase inhibitors work?
- reduce aqueous production
91
What are side effects of pilocarpine?
- constricted pupils - headache - blurred vision
92
What is the method of pilocarpine?
- muscarinic receptor agonist
93
When do drivers with glaucoma need to notify the DVLA?
- both eyes: group 1: private car drivers - one eye: group 2: e.g. lorry drivers
94
What are features of allergic conjunctivitis?
- bilateral erythema and swelling - watery eyes - itch - swollen eyelids - seasonal (pollen) or perennial (dust) - Hx of atopy
95
How is allergic conjunctivitis managed?
- topical antihistamines - topical mast-cell stabilisers: sodium cromoglicate
96
What is conjunctivitis?
- inflammation of conjunctiva - covers outer globe and inner surface of eyelids
97
What may be seen on examination in allergic conjunctivitis?
- papillae - cobblestone appearance
98
What type of hypersensitivity reaction causes allergic conjunctivitis?
- type I - eosinophilic
99
What is the aetiology of viral conjunctivitis?
- adenovirus (MC) - herpes virus
100
What are the features of viral conjunctivitis?
- bilateral - profuse watery discharge - associated with URTI - can cause tender preauricular lymphadenopathy
101
What is pharyngoconjunctival fever?
- patients present with pharyngitis, conjunctivitis and fever
102
What is epidemic keratoconjunctivitis?
- severe - corneal involvement - photophobia
103
What is the management of viral conjunctivitis?
- self-limiting - wash hands and avoid sharing towels
104
What are causative organisms of bacterial conjunctivitis?
- Staphylococcus - Streptococcus - Haemophilus - Chlamydia - gonorrhoea
105
In which group would gonorrhoea cause conjunctivitis?
- neonates - exudative - ophthalmia neonatorum - infection from birth canal
106
Which bacteria cause reactive arthritis?
- Chlamydia - gonorrhoea
107
What are the risk factors for infective conjunctivitis?
- contaminated skin - objects - unprotected sexual intercourse (bacterial)
108
What are the features of bacterial conjunctivitis?
- unilateral but can be bilateral - sticky, purulent discharge - eyes stick together on waking
109
What is the management of bacterial conjunctivitis?
- antibiotic drops: chloramphenicol - given 2-3hrly initially
110
How is infective conjunctivitis managed in pregnant women?
- BD fusidic acid
111
How is infective conjunctivitis managed in contact lens users?
- topical fluoresceins to check for corneal staining - contact lenses not to be worn - treat with quinolone or gentamicin - risk of pseudomonas
112
What treatment is given for bacterial conjunctivitis if secondary to chlamydia or gonorrhoea?
- azithromycin
113
What complications may occur from gonorrhoea causing conjunctivitis?
- keratitis - endophthalmitis - either can lead to reduced vision or blindness
114
What is uveitis?
- inflammation of the uveal tract - comprises iris, ciliary body and choroid
115
What is anterior uveitis?
- inflammation of iris and ciliary body - presents as painful, photophobic red eye
116
What is the aetiology of anterior uveitis?
- majority idiopathic - associated with HLA-B27 - AI diseases - infection - trauma
117
What are risk factors for uveitis?
- age over 20 - previous history - HLA-B27 positive
118
What conditions is anterior uveitis associated with?
- ankylosing spondylitis - reactive arthritis - IBD - Bechet's - sarcoidosis
119
Over what timeframe do uveitis symptoms develop?
- hours to several days
120
What causes unilateral vs bilateral uveitis?
- unilateral: idiopathic or herpetic (can progress to bilateral) - bilateral: systemic
121
What symptoms occur with anterior uveitis?
- pain (may inc w/ use) - red eye - photophobia - lacrimation - blurred vision - small, irregular pupil - impaired visual acuity
122
What is hypopyon?
- pus and inflammatory cells in anterior chamber - causes visible fluid level
123
What systemic symptoms may occur with anterior uveitis?
- joint pain - back pain - IBD flare
124
How many chronic/intermediate/posterior uveitis differ?
- painless and decreased vision
125
What may be seen via pen torch examination in uveitis?
- ciliary injection: dilated conjunctival vessels - irregular pupil - cloudy cornea - hypopyon
126
What may be seen on slit lamp examination of anterior uveitis?
- ciliary flush: red ring spreading outwards - flare: foggy appearance of anterior chamber - inflammatory cells in anterior chamber - posterior synechiae: adhesions distorting pupil shape
127
How is anterior uveitis managed?
- r/v by ophthalmology - cycloplegics - topical steroid drops - treat underlying cause (may need systemic steroids or immunosuppressants)
128
What do cycloplegics do and give an example?
- dilate pupils to relieve pain and photophobia - cyclopentolate
129
What is the prognosis of anterior uveitis?
- self-limiting - commonly reoccurs in young pts aged 18-35
130
What is scleritis?
- full-thickness scleral inflammation - non-infective
131
What are risk factors for scleritis?
- RA - SLE - sarcoidosis - granulomatosis with polyangiitis
132
What are the features of scleritis?
- red sclera - dull, boring pain - pain with eye movement - watering and photophobia - gradual decrease in vision
133
Why is there pain with eye movement in scleritis?
- extraocular muscles insert into sclera - so movement will cause pain
134
What may be seen on examination in scleritis?
- eye is deep pink with violet hue - dilated superficial bright red blood vessels - tenderness to palpation
135
What is the management of scleritis?
- treat underlying cause: may need high-dose steroids or immunosuppressants - oral NSAIDs
136
How do peri-orbital and orbital cellulitis differ?
- peri-orbital: anterior to orbital septum - orbital: posterior to septum
137
What is orbital cellulitis?
- infection of muscle and fat within orbit - does not involve globe
138
What is the epidemiology of orbital cellulitis?
- more common in children
139
What is the aetiology of orbital cellulitis?
- infection from acute bacterial sinusitis - commonly from paranasal sinuses/URTI - may progress from periorbital cellulitis
140
What are the features of orbital cellulitis?
- erythema and swelling around eye - blurred vision - painful eye movements - change in colour vision - proptosis - eyelid oedema and ptosis
141
How can orbital and periorbital cellulitis be differentiatied?
- orbital cellulitis: reduced visual acuity, proptosis, painful eye movements - none of these in periorbital
142
What bloods are done in orbital cellulitis?
- FBC: WCC elevated - CRP elevated - cultures, MC&S: Strep, Staph, HiB
143
What imaging is done in orbital cellulitis?
- CT with contrast: inflammation deep to septum, sinusitis
144
What 3 criteria mean imaging is indicated in orbital cellulitis?
- clinical examination not possible - red flags - failure to improve after 36-48h Abx
145
What is the management of orbital cellulitis?
- IV Abx for 7-10 days
146
What is the management if orbital collection is seen on imaging?
- evacuation of orbital pus - drainage of paranasal sinus pus
147
What is periorbital cellulitis?
- infection of soft tissues - incl eyelids, skin and subcut tissue in face - less serious than orbital
148
What is the aetiology of periorbital cellulitis?
- superficial injury: - insec bite, chalazion, conjunctivitis
149
What are the most frequent causative organisms of periorbital cellulitis?
- Staph aureus, Staph epidermidis, streptococci, anaerobic
150
What is the epidemiology of periorbital cellulitis?
- children - median age is 21 mo - more common in winter due to more RTIs
151
What are features of periorbital cellulitis?
- pain, redness, swelling of eyelid
152
What is seen on examination of periorbital cellulitis?
- erythema and oedema of eyelid - partial or complete ptosis of eye - systemically well - no pain on eye movement
153
What investigations are done for periorbital cellulitis?
- bloods - swab - contrast CT
154
What is the management of periorbital cellulitis?
- oral co-amox - clindamycin if allergic
155
In what condition may uveitis be silent?
- Juvenile idiopathic arthritis - particularly oligoarticular - may present without red eye, photophobia
156
What may cause a subconjunctival haemorrhage?
- trauma - significant rise in intraocular pressure - eye rubbing
157
What are risk factors for subconjunctival haemorrhage?
- hypertension - anticoagulation/antiplatelets
158
What are features of subconjunctival haemorrhage?
- asymptomatic - may have gritty eye - stops at limbus (junction between cornea and conjunctiva)
159
How is subconjunctival haemorrhage managed?
- lubricants if gritty eye - will resolve over a few weeks -
160
What is squint? What are the 2 types?
- misalignment of the visual axes - can be concomitant or paralytic - if uncorrected can lead to ambylopia (one eye favoured)
161
What is concomitant squint?
- imbalance in extraocular muscles - convergent more common than divergent
162
What is paralytic squint?
- rarer - paralysis of extraocular muscles
163
What is the corneal light reflex test for squint? (Hirschberg test)
- hold light source 30cm from pt face - see if light reflects symmetrically on pupils
164
What is the cover test for squint?
- ask child to focus on object - cover one eye and observe movement of uncovered eye - there should be no shift in fixation of the eye
165
What is a stye?
- external hordeolum - staph infection of eyelash follicle - infection of glands of Zeis (sebaceous glands) or Moll (sweat glands)
166
What is hordeolum internum?
- infection of Meibomian glands - deeper and more painful than stye - point inwards towards eyeball
167
How is a stye treated?
- hot compresses - analgesia - topical abx (chloramphenicol) if severe/recurrent
168
What is a chalazion?
- granulomatous inflammatory lesion of obstructed Meibomian gland - non-infectious
169
What is the appearance of a chalazion?
- painLESS red eyelid cyst - if infected > internal hordeolum
170
How is a chalazion treated?
- warm compress - gentle massage - if persistent: incision and curettage
171
What is entropion? What are the symptoms?
- inward turning of eyelid - presses lashes against eye - causes pain - can cause corneal damage and ulceration
172
How is entropion managed?
- taping eyelid and eye drops - surgical correction
173
What is ectropion?
- outward turning of eyelid - usually affects bottom lid - eyeball exposed > can lead to exposure keratopathy
174
What is trichiasis?
- eyelashes grow inwards - causes corneal ulceration
175
How is trichiasis managed?
- remove affected eyelashes - laser treatment to prevent regrowth
176
What is the pathophysiology of diabetic retinopathy?
- hyperglycaemia > inc blood flow - precipitates damage - microaneurysms - retinal ischaemia
177
What are the 3 categories of diabetic retinopathy?
- non-proliferative - proliferative - maculopathy
178
What is mild/background NP diabetic retinopathy?
- ≥1 microaneurysm
179
What is moderate NPDR?
- microaneurysms - blot haemorrhages - hard exudates - retinal ischaemia: venous beading, intraretinal microvascular abnormalities
180
What is severe NPDR? 4-2-1 rule
- blot haemorrhages in 4 quadrants - venous beading in 2 - IRMA in 1
181
What are the signs on examination of proliferative diabetic retinopathy?
- neovascularisation - fibrous tissue anterior to retinal disc - vitreous haemorrhage - retinal detachment
182
What are the symptoms of maculopathy in diabetes?
- blurred vision when reading - difficulty recognising faces - check visual acuity
183
What are intravitreal vascular endothelial growth factor inhibitors used to treat? Give an example, and a CI.
- maculopathy - proliferative retinopathy - ranibizumab - CI if stroke or MI in past 3mo
184
What is the mechanism of photocoagulation for diabetic retinopathy?
- primary intervention for proliferative DR - creates burns in retina - destroys photoreceptors > dec O2 demand > delays DR progression
185
What are 3 key complications of panretinal photocoagulation?
- reduced quality of night vision - restricted peripheral vision - macular oedema
186
How often are individuals screened for diabetic retinopathy?
- annually
187
What is keratitis?
- inflammation of cornea - urgent
188
What are the bacterial and viral causes of keratitis?
- Staph aureus - Pseudomonas aeruginosa (contact lens) - viral: herpes simplex
189
What are the features of keratitis?
- painful red eye - photophobia - gritty sensation - hypopyon
190
How is keratitis managed?
- contact lens: same day referral to rule out microbial keratitis - stop using contact lens - topical fluoroquinolone - cyclopentolate pain relief
191
How does herpes simplex keratitis present?
- red painful eye - photophobia - epiphora (watery eye) - dec visual acuity - dendritic corneal ulcer
192
How is herpes simplex keratitis managed?
- topical aciclovir
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What history should be taken from contact lens wearers in keratitis?
- type of contact lens: daily, monthly - duration of wear per day - slept, showered, or swam with lenses in
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What are the features of optic neuritis?
- unilateral decrease in visual acuity over hrs or days - poor colour discrimination - pain worse on eye movement - RAPD - central scotoma
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What is relative afferent pupillary defect? How is it identified?
- affected AND normal eye dilate when light shone on affected - identified by swinging light test
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What are the causes of RAPD?
- retinal detachment - optic neuritis
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What is retinal detachment?
- layers of retina separate - neurosensory retina separates from retinal pigment epithelium
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What are risk factors for retinal detachment?
- diabetes - high myopia - age - previous cataract surgery - eye trauma
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What is the presentation of retinal detachment?
- sudden painless visual loss: shadow/curtain - shadow/curtain progressing from centre to periphery - new onset flashing lights and floaters - cobwebs in peripheral vision
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What is seen on examination of retinal detachment?
- RAPD - red reflex los - reduced visual acuity - tobacco dust sign on slit lamp (Shafer's sign)
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How is retinal detachment managed preventatively?
- tear treated with laser photocoagulation
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What are the 3 surgical techniques used to manage retinal detachment?
- vitrectomy - pneumatic retinopexy - scleral buckle
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How to differentiate between homonymous quadrantinopias?
- superior: lesion of inferior optic radiation in temporal lobe - inferior: lesion of superior radiation in parietal lobe - PITS: parietal - inferior; temporal - superior
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How can you differentiate between the cause of a superior and inferior bitemporal hemianopia?
- upper quadrant defect: inferior chiasmal compression (pituitary tumour) - lower defect: superior compression: craniopharyngioma
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How does visual loss differ with pre and post chiasmal lesions?
- prechiasmal lesions: ipsilateral monocular defect - postchiasmal lesions: homonymous defects of contralateral side
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What visual field loss would a lateral optic chiasm lesion cause?
- ipsilateral monocular nasal hemianopia
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What visual field loss would an optic tract lesion cause? What are causes of this?
- contralateral homonymous hemianopia - MCA stroke - tumour
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What visual field loss would an optic radiation lesion cause?
- contralateral homonymous quadrantinopia
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What visual field loss would an occipital cortex lesion cause? What are causes of this?
- contralateral homonymous hemianopia with macular sparing - PCA stroke - trauma
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Which loops are affected in upper quadrantinopia vs lower?
- Upper: Meyer's (temporal) - lower: parietal
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What are the features of corneal abrasion?
- eye pain - lacrimation - photophobia - foreign body sensation - decreased visual acuity
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How is corneal abrasion investigated?
- fluorescein staining - yellow stained abrasion visible with cobalt blue filter
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How is corneal abrasion managed?
- topical abx
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What is vitreous haemorrhage?
- bleeding into vitreous humour
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What are the causes of vitreous haemorrhage?
- proliferative diabetic retinopathy - posterior vitreous detachment - ocular trauma
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How does vitreous haemorrhage present?
- painless visual loss or haze - red hue in vision - floaters/shadows/dark spots - dec visual acuity
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How is vitreous haemorrhage investigated?
- obscured fundal view - absent red reflex if severe
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How is vitreous haemorrhage managed?
- observation, avoid heavy lifting, red flags - laser therapy - surgical if not clearing
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What is posterior vitreous detachment?
- separation of vitreous membrane from retina
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What is the epidemiology of posterior vitreous detachment?
- over 65s - females
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What are the features of posterior vitreous detachment?
- sudden appearance of floaters - flashes of light - blurred vision - cobwebs
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What is seen on ophthalmoscopy in posterior vitreous detachment?
- Weiss ring - ring shaped floater due to detachment around optic nerve
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How is posterior vitreous detachment managed?
- symptoms improve over 6mo - if associated retinal tear or detachment this needs surgery
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What are risk factors for subconjunctival haemorrhage?
- trauma - contact lens use - idiopathic - valsalva manoeuvre - htn and bleeding disorder
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What are symptoms and signs of subconjunctival haemorrhage?
- unilateral red eye - flat, red patch on conjunctiva - normal vision
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How is subconjunctival haemorrhage managed?
- self limiting, resolves in 2-3 weeks
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What are 4 features of optic nerve dysfunction?
- decrease in visual acuity - decrease in colour vision - RAPD - painful eye movement
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What is CRVO?
- thrombus forms in retinal veins and obstructs venous draining from the retina
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What is BRVO vs CRVO based on location?
- BRVO: obstruction in one of the four main retinal veins - CRVO: obstruction of the main retinal vein
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What are risk factors for CRVO?
- atherosclerosis: htn, cvd, diabetes, obesity, age - hypercoaguable: glaucoma, myeloma, sickle cell, smoking
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Why does ischaemic CRVO have a poorer prognosis than non-ischaemic?
- retinal non-perfusion - capillary closure - retinal hypoxia - increased risk of neovascularisation
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What is the presentation of CRVO?
- sudden painless unilateral visual loss
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How does BRVO present?
- partial visual field defect - metamorphopsia (distorted wavy vision)
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What is seen on fundoscopy of CRVO?
- stormy sunset appearance (retinal haemorrhages) - dot and blot haemorrhages - cotton wool spots - tortuous retinal veins - retinal oedema
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How can CRVO be investigated with imaging?
- fluorescein angiography - OCT
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How is CRVO managed?
- refer to ophthalmology - if neovascularisation: pan-retinal photocoagulation - macular oedema/vessel leakage: anti-VEGF (ranibizumab)
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When are anti-VEGF agents contraindicated in CRVO treatment and what can be used instead?
- pregnancy - stroke/MI within past 3 months - use corticosteroids
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What are the key criteria for papilloedema?
- blurred optic disc margins - in the CONTEXT of raised ICP - BILATERAL
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What is episcleritis?
- acute onset inflammation in the episclera - superficial layer lying between under teh conjunctiva and above the sclera
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What are the features of episcleritis?
- red eye - painless but may have mild irritation - watering and mild photophobia
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How can episcleritis and scleritis be differentiated?
- phenylephrine drops - blanches conjunctival and episcleral vessels - if redness improves after phenylephrine, can diagnose episcleritis
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How is episcleritis managed?
- oral NSAIDs - lubricating eye drops
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What is anisocoria?
- pupils are unequal sizes
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What is mydriasis? Give one differential
- dilated pupil - disruption to parasympathetic innervation - surgical 3rd nerve palsy
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What is miosis? Give 2 differentials
- constricted pupil - disruption to sympathetic innervation to the eye - Horner syndrome - Argyll Robertson pupil
246
In a CN3 palsy, what position is the eye and why?
- down and out - pulled by SR4 and LR6 which pull the eye downwards (4) and outwards (6)
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How do you differentiate between a surgical and medical cause of CN3 palsy? By dilated/normal pupil
- surgical: dilated pupil as something is pressing on the vessel from the outside in e.g. post communicating artery aneurysm/ADPKD - medical: normal pupil, htn or diabetes
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What is seen on examination of an Argyll Robertson pupil
- pupils constrict during accommodation - don't react to light
249
What is the difference between papillitis and papilloedema?
- optic disc swelling - papillitis is not bilateral or caused by raised ICP
250
Give 4 causes of anterior uveitis
- Seronegative spondyloarthropathies: ankylosing spondylitis, psoriasis - Behcet's - sarcoidosis - IBD