RETINAL VEIN OCCLUSION Flashcards
What are the two types of retinal vein occlusion and what are their differences?
Central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO)
Branch retinal vein occlusion (BRVO)
Causes are similar but treatment is different
What are the main causes of retinal vein occlusion (both types)?
Hypertension
Arteriosclerosis
Diabetes
Hypercoagulable states - SLE, antiphospholipid syndrome
Oral contraception
What are the causes of central retinal vein occlusion exclusively (ie don’t commonly cause branch retinal vein occlusion)?
Primary open angle glaucoma
Inflammatory eye disease: Sarcoidosis and Syphilis
Polycythaemia
Lymphoma
Myeloma
What are the causes of branch retinal vein occlusion exclusively (ie don’t commonly cause central retinal vein occlusion)?
Inflammatory eye disease with vasculitis: Behcet’s
What are the clinical features of retinal vein occlusion?
Sudden painless loss of vision
Unilateral
Relative afferent pupil defect
Flame haemorrhages - in central vein occlusion bleeding will be in all four quadrants
Cotton wool spots
Disc swelling
Macular oedema
Neovascularization
What are the investigations that should be done for anyone who presents with retinal vein occlusion?
BP
Bloods: FBC, lipids, BM, ESR, TFT,
Coagulation screen
Protein C and S
Autoantibody screen
ECG
Fluorescein angiogram
What are the two types of central retinal vein occlusion?
Ischaemic
Non-ischaemic
In terms of clinical features what are the differences between ischaemic and non-ischaemic central retinal vein occlusion?
Ischaemic - greater degree of visual loss (to less than 6/60)
Also involves relative afferent pupil defect
Non-ischaemic - better than 6/60 vision
No relative afferent pupil defect
What are the complications of untreated ischaemic central retinal vein occlusion?
75% develop neovascularization
50% neovascular glaucoma (rubreosis)
How do we treat someone with central retinal vein occlusion?
Laser treatment for neovascularization
Clinical trials ongoing for medical treatment
Frequent follow up - every 2-4 weeks
How do we treat someone with branch retinal vein occlusion?
Usually none required. Treat causes.
Laser used if neovascularization.
Follow up 4 months