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Acute Vision Loss

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Have a clear DDx for causes of acute vision loss. Have a clear understanding of ... BRVO: involves one quadrant in arcuate pattern. Fairly common in elderly ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Acute Vision Loss


1
Acute Vision Loss
  • Dr. Anisman
  • 17 March 2008

2
Objectives
  • Have a clear DDx for causes of acute vision loss
  • Have a clear understanding of immediate
    management steps to be taken by the primary care
    provider

3
Retinal Artery Occlusion Hx
  • Central (CRAO) or branched (BRAO)
  • May have macular sparing (cilioretinal artery)
  • Sudden, painless, unilateral
  • Loss central vision one/more fields ? CRAO
  • Loss one (horiz) field loss ? BRAO
  • Transient loss, esp curtain descending ?
    amaurosis fugax impending RAO

4
Retinal Artery Occlusion Signs
  • Marcus-Gunn pupil (relative afferent pupillary
    defect)
  • Retinal edema (after 1st few hrs)
  • Embolus may be seen at O.N. (CRAO) or branch
    point (BRAO)
  • Cherry red spot ischemia edema of posterior
    retina
  • w/in several hrs of occlusion

5
CRAO
6
BRAO
7
Retinal Artery Occlusion Etiology
  • Carotid disease
  • Valvular disease
  • Giant Cell arteritis
  • Jaw claudication, scalp tenderness, tongue pain,
    PMR, H/A
  • Thrombosis hypercoagulable states
  • Pregnancy, OCPs, lupus anticoag, factor V Leiden,
    antithrombin III, ptn C/S deficiency

8
Retinal Artery Occlusion Etiology
  • IV drug use (talc retinopathy)
  • Lipid emboli from trauma
  • DIC
  • Sickle cell
  • Polyarteritis nodosa
  • Retinal migraine

9
Retinal Artery Occlusion W/U
  • Heart, Carotid exam
  • TA tenderness
  • Neuro exam
  • Va, visual fields, pupil and retinal exam
  • Carotid u/s
  • ECHO

10
Retinal Artery Occlusion W/U
  • Labs
  • ESR/CRP
  • CBC w/ diff
  • Coags
  • Consider hypercoag w/u

11
Retinal Artery Occlusion Mgmt
  • EMERGENCY OPTHO REFERRAL!!
  • Dislodge embolus to move embolus downstream
    (decr IOP, dilate vessels)
  • Ocular massage firm digital pr on globe x 10-15
    sec, followed by rapid release of pr (may repeat
    2-3x)
  • Diamox 500mg IV or PO
  • Topical beta blocker (timolol 0.5)
  • NTG sl
  • Antiocoagulation once w/u confirms embolism
  • Hyperbaric O2 within 24hr

12
Retinal Vein Occlusion
  • Central (CRVO) or branched (BRVO)
  • CRVO involves all 4 retinal quadrants
  • BRVO involves one quadrant in arcuate pattern
  • Fairly common in elderly
  • As with RAOs, may only be noticed with unaffected
    eye closed
  • Impedes flow of blood from retinal circulation

13
Retinal Vein Occlusion Sx
  • Sudden or gradual, painless blurry Va or vision
    loss
  • Unilateral (horiz) visual field loss (BRVO)
  • Rare unilateral pain and redness w/ loss of
    vision (neovascular glaucoma assoc w/ RVO)

14
Retinal Vein Occlusion Signs
  • Marcus-Gunn pupil
  • blood and thunder fundus
  • Dilated tortuous veins
  • Flame-shaped hemorrhage
  • Cotton-wool spots
  • Macular edema
  • Exudates

15
CRVO blood thunder
16
CRVO cotton wool spots
17
BRVO
18
Retinal Vein Occlusion W/U
  • Va, visual fields, pupil and retinal exam
  • Systemic htn
  • HCG? OCPs?
  • h/o other thromboembolic events, fam hx
  • Labs
  • Hypercoagulable w/u as in RAO
  • tsh to check for thyroid eye disease
  • compression of CRV

19
Retinal Vein Occlusion Mgmt
  • Optho eval w/in 48-72 hrs
  • Laser photocoagulation to reduce macular edema
    and neovascular complications

20
Retinal Detachment
  • Fluid separates retina from underlying retinal
    pigment epithelium
  • Causes
  • Posterior vitreous detachment ? retinal tear
    ?liquefied vitreous dissects between retina and
    pigment epithelium
  • Serous fluid under retina
  • Traction from scar tissue in vitreous (diabetic
    retinopathy ? repeated vitreous hem)

21
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22
Retinal Detachment Sx
  • Flashing lights
  • Floaters
  • Visual field loss curtain, shadow or bubble
  • Metamorphopsia
  • Decreased Va
  • Painless

23
Metamorphopsia
24
Retinal Detachment Signs
  • Marcus-Gunn
  • Unilateral visual field loss
  • Sectoral, quadrant, hemifield, total
  • Retinal exam w/ direct ophthalmoscope may be
    unrevealing

25
Retinal Detachment
26
Retinal Detachment
27
Retinal Detachment W/U Mgmt
  • Immediate Ophtho referral!!
  • Surgical intervention
  • If acute or progressive should be referred to
    Ophthalmology lt24h, if chronic may be seen with
    2-4 weeks

28
Vitreous Hemorrhage
  • Due to underlying vascular process
  • Painless, pt may complain of red shower or
    spots
  • May be slower in onset vs RAO, RVO or retinal
    detachment
  • Visualization of retina often impossible
  • Ophthalmic u/s done by eye docs

29
Vitreous Hemorrhage Etiology
  • Proliferative diabetic retinopathy
  • Posterior vitreous detachment w/ an avulsed
    vessel
  • Retinal tear through vessel
  • Trauma
  • Retinal vascular lesion
  • Management ophtho referral tx underlying
    process

30
Vitreous Hemorrhage
31
Angle Closure Glaucoma
  • Outflow of aqueous humor from shallow anterior
    chamber is occluded when pupil dilates
  • FM 3-41, high incidence in asians
  • Peak age 55-70
  • Shorter, smaller far-sighted eyes

32
Normal Angle
33
Narrow or Closed Angle
34
Angle Closure Glaucoma
  • Precipitating factors
  • Enter darkened room
  • Stress
  • Dilating drugs
  • Systemic rx
  • Anticholinergics
  • sympathomimetics

35
Angle Closure Glaucoma Sx
  • Intense pain photophobia
  • Blurred vision, usually unilateral
  • Halos around lights
  • Vasovagal sx (diaphoresis, n/v)

36
Angle Closure Glaucoma Signs
  • Mid-dilated pupil
  • Conjunctival injection w/ lid edema
  • Corneal edema
  • Blurring of corneal light reflex
  • IOP markedly elevated (60-80 mm Hg)

37
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38
Angle Closure Glaucoma Mgmt
  • OPHTHO EMERGENCY!!!!
  • Rx to lower IOP
  • Topical beta-blocker (timolol 0.5 1 drop)
  • CA inhibitors (Diamox 500mg IV, or 250 mg PO x2)
  • Osmotic agents (mannitol 1-2g/kg IV over 45min)
  • Laser iridectomy

39
Corneal Ulcer
  • Risk factors
  • Recent trauma or contact lens wear (may develop
    from corneal abrasion)
  • Poor lid apposition
  • Incr risk Gm neg bacteria (esp Pmonas) w/ soft
    contact lens wear
  • Fungal h/o trauma w/ vegetable matter or chronic
    topical steroid use

40
Corneal Ulcer Sx
  • Pain
  • Redness
  • Decreased Va
  • photophobia

41
Corneal Ulcer Signs
  • Dense corneal infiltrate w/ overlying epithelial
    defect
  • Hypopyon
  • Corneal destruction and ocular perforation
  • Ulcer w/ feathery border fungal

42
Corneal ulcer w/ hypopion
43
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44
Corneal Ulcer Tx
  • Immediate Ophtho referral
  • Corneal scraping for Grams stain Cx
  • Abx gent, cefazolin
  • Contact lens removal
  • Pt will require daily f/u until healed

45
Uveitis
  • May be subacute in onset
  • Pain, photophobia, decreased vision
  • Exam
  • Small, sluggish pupil
  • Circumlimbal flush
  • Cell flare in ant chamber on SLEx
  • Ophtho eval before ocular steroids

46
Uveitis
47
Uveitis
48
Uveitis
49
Uveitis
50
Uveitis
  • Etiol most idiopathic many systemic causes
  • W/U careful HP, looking for systemic disease
  • for unilateral, first-episode disease,
    unremarkable hx and exam, no w/u needed
  • for bilateral, recurrent disease, systemic w/u
    indicated

51
Uveitis
  • Tx
  • ophtho referral w/in 24h
  • cycloplegia (topical homatropine 5 bid)
  • topical steroid (Pred-Forte 1) initiated by an
    ophthalmologist

52
Optic Neuritis
  • 15-45 y.o.
  • Usually subacute (several days)
  • Pain w/ eye movement (/-)
  • May have h/o transient neurological disturbances
  • Assoc w/ MS

53
Optic Neuritis
  • Signs
  • Optic Disc edema (unusual)
  • Visual field cuts, esp. central
  • Maracus-Gunn pupil (very common)

54
Optic Neuritis (pappiledema)
55
Optic Neuritis Mgmt
  • Ophtho referral
  • eval for other ocular dz
  • formal visual field testing
  • MR of brain orbits confirmatory and to look
    for early M.S.

56
Optic Neuritis
  • MR look for white matter plaques
  • IV steroids if
  • Decreases further MS-related events
  • Hastens visual recovery
  • No change in final Va outcome
  • If neg, IV steroids of no proven benefit
  • Consider in single-eye patients
  • Never use PO steroids
  • Increased recurrence of O.N.

57
Exudative Macular Degeneration
  • 1 Cause of blindness gt65 y/o
  • Worsen gradually or suddenly
  • Metamorphopsia common
  • Photopsia /-
  • Central scotoma /-
  • More commonly subacute-chronically progressive
    vision loss

58
Exudative Macular Degeneration Central Scotoma
59
Exudative Macular Degeneration
  • Signs
  • Decreased Va
  • Drusen yellowish deposits deep to retina
  • Limit nutritional/metabolic support to outer
    retina

60
Exudative Macular Degeneration Drusen
61
Exudative Macular Degeneration
  • Management
  • Optho referral
  • Amsler grid
  • Fluoresscein angiography
  • Tx laser photocoagulation (selected cases)

62
Miscellaneous
  • CVA
  • Functional
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