Week 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Symptoms

A

Redness
Pain
Blurred vision
Watering

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2
Q

Sign

A

Reduced VA
Epithelial abrasion
Swollen optic disc
Raised IOP

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3
Q

Management

A

Advice
Artificial tears
Antibacterial tears
Referrals

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4
Q

Reason for visit

A

Patients may come into practice with a specific symptom (chief complaint) or for a routine check.

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5
Q

Key symptoms/ questions

A

Reduced vision
Headaches
Diplopia
Flashing lights
Floaters

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6
Q

Exploring the chief complaint

A

Location
Onset
Frequency
Time
Self treatment
Association

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7
Q

Reduced vision

A
  • Is it monocular or binocular
  • Is the vision reduced at near, distance or both
  • Determine if its constant or intermitten
  • Inquire about severity and potential cause such as ocular disease or refractive error ]
  • Consider accommodation annomalies like amblyopia
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8
Q

Diplopia

A
  • Is it genuine diplopia or does the patient see blurred images, ask if they see 2 distinict images
  • Is it monocular or binocular diplopia
  • Monocular diplopia could be caused by a cataract particularly cortical cataract
  • Binocular diplopia often indicates misalignment or can be due to neurological issue or weakness of the eye muscles
  • Determine weather it is vertical or horizontal diplopia is the image side by side or on top of the other
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9
Q

Flashing lights

A
  • Distinguish between visual phenomena and flashing lights
  • Flashing light that caused by to retinal or vitreous detachment occurs when the vitreous gel tugs on the retina
  • Ask the px weather it is monocular or binocular, duration and weather it is worse under specific light conditions
  • Flashed caused by detachment are usually brief and effect the temporal visual field
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10
Q

Floaters

A
  • Floaters are common and are caused by change in the vitreous humour structure
  • Patients may describe floaters as spots, cobwebs, or threads that move with the eye motion
  • Ask patient about the frequency, apperance and mono/ bono about floaters
  • Sudden onset of floaters indicate retinal or vitreous detachment
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11
Q

Red eye

A
  • Determine if the redness if unilateral or bilateral and ask px if the redness started simultaneously in both eyes
  • Consider the level of comfort, pain, photophobia that can indicate underlying causes of redness
  • Observe the eye for any sticky discharge which can indicate bacterial conjunctivitis, watery discharge indicates viral infection or ocular allergy
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12
Q

Beyond symptoms

A

General history - Diabetes and high blood pressure
- Medication
-Allergies
Family history - Diabetes or high blood pressure
Ocular history- ever visited the hospital as a kid or worse an eye patch
Family ocular history- any problems with eyes, galucoma
Lifestyle- what do you do for a living

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13
Q

Headaches

A
  • Exclude any visual or ocular explanation
  • Distinguish between longstanding an those that are new (always had headache)
  • Do they go away with pain killers
  • Can be caused by intracranial pressure (pressure around the eyes
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