Cataracts Flashcards
What is the anatomy of the lens?
Note that the top of this picture represents anterior lens, and bottom represents posterior.
What are cataracts?
Opacification of the crystalline lens leading to blindness
What is the aetiology of cataracts? (x7)
- Normal ageing
- Trauma
- Metabolic disorders (hereditary or acquired): diabetes, parathyroid disorders, hypothyroidism, Wilson’s disease, hypocalcaemia, rubella, Down’s and many more
- Medications
- Congenital problems or congenital influences such as toxins
- Smoking
- UV radiation exposure.
What is the pathophysiology of cataracts?
Changes in the lens proteins, called crystallins affects how the lens refracts light, affecting acuity. Chemical modification and formation of new cortical (outer layer) fibres leads to thickening, yellow-colouration, and hardening of the lens = nuclear sclerosis. Lens becomes stronger and this manifests as increasing myopia (far away objects are blurry) – see photo.
What are the different types of cataract? (x6) Aetiology?
- Sclerotic: pathophysiology described above; opacification of nucleus of lens and age-related
- Cortical: opacification of the lens cortex
- Posterior/anterior sub-capsular: opacification of the posterior/anterior sub-capsular cortex. Associated with drugs and metabolic disorders, and trauma respectively.
- Cerulean: small and bluish opacity in lens cortex
- Snowflake: grey-white sub-capsular opacities associated with uncontrolled diabetes
- Sunflower: yellow/brown pigmentation of lens capsule in Wilson’s disease
What is the epidemiology of cataracts: Common? Age? Gender?
Most common cause of reversible blindness. Associated with older age. More common in women.
What are the signs and symptoms of cataracts? (x4 (x3))
- Slow decrease in vision, though some aetiologies such as diabetes might present with more sudden decreases
- Glare (described especially when driving at night)
- Washed-out colour vision (in nuclear cataracts, yellow changes to lens results in decreased richness of colours, especially blue)
- FUNDOSCOPY: Defects in red reflex, decrease in visual acuity that cannot be corrected by refractive correction, and an eye examination that reveals normal findings apart from opacity in crystalline lens.
What are the investigations for cataracts?
Clinical diagnosis with fundoscopy including slit lamp examination of anterior chamber to visualise cataract.