Opthalmology Flashcards
Changes seen in ARMD vs diabetic vs hypertensive retinopathy?
ARMD: drusen, choroidal neorevascularisation (wet AMD - 10% of cases), geographic atrophy (dry AMD - 90% of cases)
Diabetes: microaneurysm, dot & blot and flame haemorrhages
HTN: copper wiring, AV nipping, dot, blot and flame haemorrhages, cotton wool spots, papilloedema
tx of chronic open angle glaucoma
360 selective laser trabeculectomy if pressure >24mmHg
prostaglandin analogue (latanoprost)
beta-blocker eye drop (timolol)
carbonic anhydrase eye drop (bitanoloprost, brinzolamide)
sympathomimetic eye drop (pilocarpine, brimonidine)
Tx of acute closed angle glaucoma
IV acetazolamide
Topical pilocarpine
Surgical or laser iridotomy
difference between pterygium and pinguecula?
Pterygium: go beyond cornea
Pinguecula: doesn’t reach cornea
Both: are benign growths of conjunctiva that comes from the nasal side. wedge shapes and moves towards the centre as it is a continuation of the conjunctival epithelium.
differences between:
central scotoma
arcuate scotoma
centrocaecal scotoma
ring scotoma
central: cannot see the centre of visual field. seen in diseases affecting the macula - eg age-related maculopathy
arcuate: cannot see one part of the visual field - seen in glaucoma
centrocaecal: cannot see from the centre and it radiates out (like a caecum). it often involves the macula and the blind spot. seen in toxic/nutritional deficiencies (eg vit B12) or leber’s optic neuropathy.
ring: cannot see the area in a ring-like pattern (but can still see the centre of visual field). seen in retinitis pigmentosa.
when looking at differences in symptoms between orbital cellulitis OC and preseptal cellulitis PC, which symptom presents in OC but not PC?
proptosis
visual changes
pain on eye movement
restriction of eye movement
RAPD
(but they both contain these:) swelling or erythema of eyelid, periorbital oedema, ptosis
warm or cold compress for
- stye/hordeolum (hair follicle)
- blepharitis
- chalazion/meibomian cyst (blocked gland)
warm compress
a curtain or dark shadow moving across vision towards the centre -?diagnosis
transient loss of vision (TVL) aka amaurosis fugax
usually due to ischaemic or non-ischaemic cause:
- ischaemic: GCA, CVA, retinal arteriolar emboli (if affect one eye: likely anterior circulation affected such as carotid artery. if affect both eyes, consider posterior circulationn affected such as basilar artery/vertebral artery)
- non-ischaemic: dry eyes, migraine
which topical antibiotic should be avoided for pregnant lady with conjunctivitis?
chloramphenicol
(there may be a risk of ‘neonatal grey baby syndrome’ with oral use in 3rd trimester but no studies for topical use)
what is:
- hard exudate
- soft exudate
Hard: well defined yellow-white deposits like ring. Due to lipoprotein leaking out of blood vessel. Seen in diabetes & HTN.
Soft: like cotton-wool. Occur in infarcted retina. Due to swelling of the axons in the nerve fibre of the retina.
red eye that improves with topical phenylephrine
episcleritis
what eye pathology is linked with connective tissue disease such as ehler’s danlos and marfan syndrome?
lens dislocation (upwards for Marfan)
Keratoconus
tx of allergic conjunctivitis
topical antihistamine (eg diphenhydramine)
systemic antihistamine
topical mast cell stabilisers: sodium chromoglycate, nedocromil
4 features of retinal detachment
4F’s
floaters
flashing lights (photopsia)
field loss
fall in visual acuity
keith-wagener-barker classification
for HTN-retinopathy
Grade 1 - arteriolar narrowing
Grade 2 - plus AV nipping
Grade 3 - plus microaneurysm, dot-blot haemorrhages, flame shaped haemorrhage, cotton-wool spots and hard exudate
Grade 4 - plus optic disc swelling