Passmedicine Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main features of Horner’s?

A

Ptosis (eyelid drooping)
Miosis (small pupil)
Enopthalmos (sunken eye)

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2
Q

What cause’s Horner’s disease?

A

Disruption of sympathetic nerves supplying the face

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3
Q

What are the two main types of macular degeneration?

A

Dry- collections of protein and lipid beneath the outer area of the retina (drusen)
Wet or neovascular- choroidal neovascularization breaks through to the retina and leaks, causing fibrous scarring

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4
Q

What is first-line in patients with asthma for glaucoma?

A

prostaglandin analogues e.g. latanoprost

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5
Q

What are the classic symptoms of optic neuritis and what is optic neuritis often a presenting symptom of?

A

Eye pain, red desaturation, visual loss

Multiple sclerosis

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6
Q

What is Hutchinson’s sign?

A

Involvement of the tip of the nose in herpes zoster opthalmicus- strongly predicts future ocular involvement

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7
Q

What are mydriatic drops a known precipitant of?

A

Acute angle-closure glaucoma

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8
Q

What feature of the clinical picture in conjunctivitis may indicate a viral aetiology?

A

Pre-auricular lymph nodes

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9
Q

What is dacrocystitis ?

A

Inflammation of the lacrimal sac

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10
Q

What is Holmes-Adie syndrome?

A

Benign condition often seen in women- one of the differentials of a dilated pupil. The syndrome is the association of pupillary symptoms with absent knee/ankle jerk reflexes

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11
Q

What is an Argyll-Robertson pupil and what is it associated with?

A

Pupil which accommodates but doesn’t respond to light. Often seen in neurosyphilis

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12
Q

What is the most common ocular manifestation of rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Keratoconjunctivitis sicca

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13
Q

Acute angle-closure glaumacoma is associated with … whilst open-angle glaucoma is associated with…

A

Hypermetropia (long-sightedness- have “small” eyes)

Myopia (short-sightedness)

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14
Q

How can scleritis and episcleritis be differentiated?

A

Scleritis is painful, episcleritis is not painful

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15
Q

Unilateral dilated pupil, sometimes seen in combination with absent ankle/knee reflexes?

A

Holmes-Adie pupil

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16
Q

Pupil which accomodates but doesn’t react?

A

Argyll-Robertson pupil, “prostitutes pupil”

17
Q

Marcus-Gunn pupil?

A

Relative afferent pupillary defect

18
Q

Differential for RAPD? (5)

A

Optic neuritis
Ischaemic optic neuropathy
Severe retinal disease e.g. CRAO, CRVO, detachment, macular degeneration

19
Q

What is amblyopia?

A

Vision in one eye that does not fully develop

20
Q

What are the common causes of amblyopia?

A

Strabismus
Asymmetric refractive errors
Stimulus deprivation e.g. cataract, marked ptosis

21
Q

What are generally the strategy of treatment in amblyopia?

A

Optimization of vision in the ambylopic eye, as well as forcing the child to use the ambylopic eye e.g. patching, using atropine on the “good eye” to make it blurry