painless loss of vision Flashcards
viterous haemorrhage
bleeding in the viterous cavity seen in inidividuals with DM, CVS disease and retinal detachment
sudden loss of vision, floaters
signs- reduced / absent red reflex. limited / no fundal view
mx: USS to ensure no underlying retinal detachment.
vitrectomy
retinal tear/ retinal detachment
seperatoin of the sensory retina from the retinal pigment epithelium
painless loss of vision
recent hisotyr of increased number of visual floaters/flashses
dark shadow in the vision of affected eye
grey area of raised retina at site of detachment.
mx: surgical repair (cryotherapy with gas tamponade)
central retinal artery occlusion
blocked blood flow in CRA
sudden painless loss of vision
poor visual acuity (<6/60)
RAPD
pale retina
cherry red spot at macula due to cilioretinal sparing
delayed arterial filling on fluroescein angiogram
mx: ESR and CRP to exclude GCA
IOP lowering (ACEi, paracenthesis) work up for TIA
central retinal vein occlusion
blocked blood flow through central retinal vein
sudden, painless loss of vision
signs: dilated tortous veins, cotton wool spots, optic disc swelling, retinal haemrorhage visible in all four quadrants
cotton wool spots. optic disc swelling
!age, HTN, diabetes, raised IOP
ix: screen for DM, hypertension, glaucoma.
fluroescien angiography to investigate how ischaemic the fundus is.
central retinal vein occlusion
blocked blood flow through central retinal vein
sudden, painless loss of vision
signs: dilated tortous veins, cotton wool spots, optic disc swelling, retinal haemrorhage visible in all four quadrants
!age, HTN, diabetes, raised IOP
ix: screen for DM, hypertension, glaucoma.
fluroescien angiography to investigate how ischaemic the fundus is.
papillitis
acute inflammation of the optic nerve
associated with moderate / severe vision loss
can lead to optic atrohy
sudden reduced vision, discomfort on eye movement
central visual field defect, optic disc swelling, RAPD
mx: exclude MS, infection of meninges, orbital tissues or paranasal sinus
tx: intensive systemic corticotherapy
proptosis
acute / chronic expansion of globe content
can be unilateral or bilateral
signs- corneal exposure, displacement of globe
eye movements affected, RAPD
TIA (amaurosis fugax)
monocular visual loss which lasts seconds to minutes
can last 1-2 hours. vision returns to normal.
signs: normal fundus exam (embolus in retinal arteriole can be seen). neurological signs (ischaemia of cerebral hemispheres)
ix: assess CVS risk, blood count, electrolyte, lipids, fasting blood sugar, thrombophilia screen.
echocardiogram
carotid doppler
mx: aspirin, referral to neuro/cvs/vascular
optic neuritis
symptoms- painless loss of vision over hours to days.
orbital pain usually associated with eye movement
signs: female 18-45 y/o, other focal neurological signs, reduced visual acuity, color vision.
RAPD
central scotoma (area of depressed visionw hich corresponds with the point of fixation and interferes with central vision)
ix: opthalmic and neurological exam. FBC, ESR, MRI investigations, IV steroid tx required.