Ophthalmology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main refractory surfaces of the eye?

A

Cornea and lens.

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2
Q

What are the visual milestones from birth-3 months?

A

Do not focus on targets further than 20-30cm away.
Only see high contrast, e.g. chequerboard, not colours.
Cannot move their eyes between the 2 images.
At 3 months, should be able to fix and follow.

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3
Q

What are the visual milestones from 5-8 months?

A

Good colour vision by 5 months of age.

8 months old start crawling, reaches for objects.

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4
Q

What are the visual milestones from 9 months-1 year?

A

Visually spot a small (2-3mm) object nearby.
Watches faces and tries to imitate expressions.
Searches for hidden objects after observing the ‘hiding’.

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5
Q

What are the visual milestones in the first 7 years?

A

By 2 years, complete myelinisation of the optic nerve is completed; acuity is normal.
2-5 years: brain functions nearly adult, basic sensory processing abilities; analysing complex visual scenes, specific objects and faces will occur later.
By 3 years: retinal tissue is mature, the child can complete a simple form board correctly (based on visual memory), do simple pushes, draw a crude circle and put 2.5cm pegs into holes.
By 5-7 years: the functional development of brain substrates for perception of complex visual scenes takes still longer.

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6
Q

What is blindness?

A

So blind that they cannot do any work for which eyesight is essential.

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7
Q

What is visual impairment or partial sight?

A

A visual acuity from 3/60 to 6/60 with a full field.
Up to 6/24 with moderate restriction of visual field, opacities in the media or aphakia.
6/18 or better with a gross field defect (e.g. hemianopia) or a marked constriction of the field (e.g. glaucoma or retinitis pigmentosa).

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8
Q

What are the leading causes of avoidable visual impairment worldwide?

A

Cataract.
Uncorrected refractive errors.

Glaucoma.
Diabetic retinopathy.
Childhood blindness.
Age-related macular degeneration.
Trachoma.
Corneal opacities.
Other causes.
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9
Q

What are the leading causes of avoidable blindness worldwide?

A

Unoperated cataract.
Glaucoma.

Age-related macular degeneration.
Corneal opacities.
Childhood blindness.
Uncorrected refractive error.
Trachoma.
Diabetic retinopathy.
Other causes.
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10
Q

What are the leading causes of blindness in the UK?

A
Degeneration macular and posterior pole.
Glaucoma.
Diabetic retinopathy.
Multiple pathology.
Optic atrophy.
Cerebrovascular disease.
Hereditary retinal disorders.
Other conditions/ unknown.
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11
Q

What is wet AMD? aetiology, symptoms, findings, investigations, treatment, prevention.

A

Aetiology: Age related macular degeneration (AMD).
Symptoms: distortion, sudden vision loss.
Findings: blood at macula.
Investigation: fluorescein angiography (FFA), OCT.
Treatment: intra-vitreal anti-VEGF, PDT.
Prevention: avoid cigarettes (active and passive smoking); good nutrition, cardiovascular health.

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12
Q

What is diabetic retinopathy?

A

Microvascular complication of diabetes.
Vision loss if complications of proliferative disease.
Partial prevention if control good: HbA1c (DCCT); BP, lipids, proteinuria (T-2 WESDR UKPDS).
First line treatment by laser photocoagulation, but laser is destructive- may stabilise but cannot restore vision.

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13
Q

What is glaucoma?

A

A progressive optic neuropathy characterised by typical optic disc changes and commensurate visual field defects.
Raised intraocular pressure.
Irreversible

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14
Q

What is the epidemiology of glaucoma?

A

2nd leading cause of blindness UK and globally.
Irreversible.
Blind registration statistics Ireland: glaucoma accounts for 16% of blind.
2% population over 50y/o.
Incidence 0.2% per year.
5-10% go blind.
Overall UK prevalence ~1-2%.
Up to 75 patients per GP list.
Only 50% of glaucoma patients diagnosed.
Screening: glaucoma is more common in certain well defined groups.

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