GP MISC Flashcards
types of headaches
Non-life or sight threatening
- Tension headache
- Migraine
- Cluster headache
- Sinusitis
- Medication-overuse headache
- Trigeminal neuralgia
- Drug side effect e.g. CCB and statins
Life or sight threatening
Life threatening
- Intracranial lesion
- Tumour (benign/malignant or metastasis)
- Haemorrhage (trauma or aneurysm)
- Meningitis
Site threatening
- Giant cell (temporal) arteritis)
- Acute glaucoma
tension headache
- F>M
- younger people
- due to tension in muscles of the head
- poor posture
- worse at end of day
migraine
- >F>M
- pathophysiology unclear
- features
- unilateral, temporal or frontal
- throbbing
- need ro lie down
- triggers
- food, stress, menstruation
- associated symptoms
- photophobia
- nausea
- aura
medication overuse headache
- Medication used to treat headaches
- F>M
- 30-40 yrs
- Headache present on at least 15 days/month (constant)
- Using regular analgesics (at least 10 days/month)
- Headache not responding
- Occurs in pts with pre-existing headache disorder
treatment: discontinue medication
cluster headache
- M>F
- smoking
- features
- excruciating pain- like ice pick in eye
- unilateral around eye
- autonomic symptoms
- red, watery eye and blocked nose
- appears in clusters with periods of remission
- triggers
- alcohol
- cigs
- lack of sleep
- management: oxygen and triptans
trigeminal neuralgia
- F>M
- Most caused by compression of CN V due to loop of blood vessels
- 5% due to tumours/skull base abnormalities or AV malformations
- features
- unilateral
- sharp stapping elecric shock
- sudden onsett
- triggers
- light touch to face, cold wind, combing hair
temporal arteritis
- Vasculitis of large and medium sized arteries of head
- Superficial temporal artery commonly involved.
- F>M
- >50 years (most common >75 yrs)
- features
- abrupt onset of headache
- jaw claudication
- visual disturbance
management: methylprednisolone
orbital blow out fracture
- Sudden increase in infraorbital pressure (e.g. from retropulsion of eye ball (globe) by fist or ball) fractures floor of orbit (maxilla)
- Orbital content can prolapse and bleed into maxillary sinus
- Fracture site can trap structures e.g. soft tissue extraocular muscle located near orbital floor
- Prevents upward gaze on affected side
key features: double vision, numbness over cheek
sebaceous gland blockage
Stye
- Superficial blockage
- Painful lump usually in upper eyelid
- White head
- Localised infection – staphylococcus
Management
- hot compress
- +- topical antibiotics
meibomian gland cyst
chalazian
- Deeper blockage
- Painless
- Not caused by infection
- Just blockage
- 1/3 resolve of on own
- Treatment: warm compress and cleaning along eyelid margin
- No Abx
meibomian gland cyst
chalazian
- Deeper blockage
- Painless
- Not caused by infection
- Just blockage
- 1/3 resolve of on own
- Treatment: warm compress and cleaning along eyelid margin
- No Abx
blepharitis
- Blockage of glands along the eyelid margin
- More extensive
- Less of a localised lump
- Gritty crusting along eyelid margin
- Simple eyelid hygiene
- Warm compress
- Margin
- Cleaning
pre-orbital (pre-septal) cellulits
Infection occurring within eyelid tissue, superficial to orbital septum
- Secondary to superficial infection e.g. bites, wounds
- Confined to tissues superficial to orbital septum and tarsal plates
- Therefore:
- Ocular function- eye movement and vision remains unaffected
- Can be difficult to differentiate between peri-orbital and more severe orbital cellulitis
- If in doubt refer urgently- high dose IV antibiotics and surgical drainage
Orbital (post-septal) cellulitis
Infection WITHIN the orbit posterior or deep to the orbital septum
- Can arise from pre-septal cellulitis
- Usually arises from infection from within the orbit
- Signs
- Proptosis/ exophthalmos- eye pushed forward
- Reduced +/- painful eye movement
- Reduced visual acuity (optic nerve involved)
-
Most dangerous
- Inferior and superior ophthalmic veins can spread infection to the cavernous sinus causing intracranial infections
- Varbous sinus thrombosis
- Meningitis
- Inferior and superior ophthalmic veins can spread infection to the cavernous sinus causing intracranial infections
- Treatment
- Abx
- Surgery
conjunctivitis
an infection or swelling in your conjunctiva, which is a thin, transparent membrane that lies over the inner surface of the eyelid and covers the white part of your eye.
- Causes red eye
- But eye not painful
- Highly contagious