Ophthalmic History and Examination Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards
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Common causes of burning in eyes
Dry eye syndrome
Blepharitis (dandruff of eyelashes)
Chemical splash
Common causes of transient visual loss
Few seconds - papilledema (bilateral)
Few minutes - amaurosis fugax (unilateral) vertebrobasilar insufficiency (bilateral)
10-60 min - migraine (acephalgic visual without headache or classic visual precede headache)
>24 hrs sudden painless - retinal artery or vein occlusion, ischemic optic neuropathy, vitreous hemorrhage, retinal detachment
>24 hrs gradual painless loss - cataracts, refractive error (glasses need), open angle glaucoma, macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy
>24 hours painful loss - acute angle closure glaucoma, optic neuritis, uveitis
Double vision (diplopia) common associated condition
Due to cranial nerve palsy until proven otherwise
Flashes of light common associated conditions
Indicates posterior vitreous detachment (floaters), retinal detachment, or migraine
Foreign body sensation common associated conditions
Dry eye syndrome, blepharitis, foreign body, contact lens related
Itchy eye comon associated condition
Allergic conjunctivitis, contact dermatitis
Red eye common associated conditions
Discharge presence: conjunctivitis and blepharitis
No discharge: subconjunctival hemorrhage, corneal abrasion, uveitis
Tearing eyes common associated conditions
Pain - corneal abrasion, foreign body, uveitis
Minimal pain - drye eye syndrome, nasolacrimal duct obstruction
Children - nasal lacrimal duct obstruction or congenital glaucoma
Vision physical exam
- Check corrected vision first
- check vision at the correct distance for specific chart you are using
- check one eye at time
- OD is right, OS is left, and OU is both eyes, write as 20/__
Origin of 20/20 vision
Dutch ophthalmologist developed standardized eye chart in 1800’s, 20/40 means that a person can see at 20 what a normal eye can see at 40 feet, as bottom number gets larger vision is less acute/more blurry
Pupils physical exam
- Checking pupil size, if >1mm diff called anisocoria
- shape should be round unless previous eye surgery, trauma, or congenital abnormality
- Have patient fixate on distant object, shine bright light source into one eye, pupil should constrict, and other should as well due to consensual light reflex
3rd nerve palsy with fixed or dilated pupil (no indirect acommondation) could indicate…
…aneurysm?
Relative afferent pupillary defect (marcus gunn pupil)
Occurs upon flashlight testing of eye resulting in abnormal dilation upon exposure to the light indicating pathology of the optic nerve or severe retinal disease
Extraocular muscles testing physical exam
- Have patient follow and object in an H pattern to test both eyes
- test to what %in all directions the eye can move direction in that gaze from 0-100% (100% being best)
Superior oblique allows eye to move ____. Inferior oblique allows eye to move ____
down and nasally, upward and nasally