Acute Glaucoma Flashcards
1
Q
Acute Glaucoma
A
- sight-threatening emergency caused by rapid rise in intraoccular pressure
- due to sudden obstructionof aqueous humour outflow
2
Q
Risk factors for acute glaucoma
A
- anatomy (shallow ant. chamber, narrow iridocorneal angle, thick peripheral iris)
- elderly
- women
- long-sighted (myopia)
- chinest and East Asian
- family history
- medications (anything dilating pupil - adrenergics, anticholinergics)
3
Q
Pathophysiology of acute glaucoma
A
- iris bulges forward and seals off trabecular meshwork from anterior chamber
- prevents drainage of aqueous humour
- increased intraocular pressure in posterior chamber
4
Q
Clinical features of glaucoma
A
- severely painful red eye
- blurred vision
- halos around lights
- headache, nausea, vomiting
5
Q
Examination findings in acute glaucoma
A
- red, teary eye
- hazy cornea
- mid-dilated, fixed pupil
- firm eyeball on palpation
- decreased visual acuity
6
Q
Investigating acute glaucoma
A
Occular exam
- reduced VA
- mid-dilated, non-reactive pupil
- hazy cornea, shallow ant. chamber on slit lamp
Tonometry (raised ICP)
Gonioscopy (closed iridocorneal angle)
7
Q
Management of acute glaucoma
A
Medical treatment (reduce IOP):
1. combination of eye drops (pilocarpine, timolol, apraclonidine)
2. IV acetazolamide
Definitive management:
- laser peripheral iridotomy
8
Q
Differentials for acute glaucoma
A
- anterior uveitis (painful, red eye, more gradual vision loss, intense photophobia, small, irregular pupil)
- keratitis (red, painful ete, foreign body sensation, infiltrates on slit lamp)