1 / 31

Eye Spy A Case of Acute Vision Loss Tony S. Chang, MD Primary Care Conference October 6, 2004

Eye Spy A Case of Acute Vision Loss Tony S. Chang, MD Primary Care Conference October 6, 2004. Disclosures. I have no financial disclosures. Case. An 82 y.o. woman presents to her ophthalmologist 6 hours after waking up with vision loss in her right eye. PMH. Monoclonal gammopathy

vivian
Download Presentation

Eye Spy A Case of Acute Vision Loss Tony S. Chang, MD Primary Care Conference October 6, 2004

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Eye Spy A Case of Acute Vision Loss Tony S. Chang, MD Primary Care Conference October 6, 2004

  2. Disclosures • I have no financial disclosures.

  3. Case An 82 y.o. woman presents to her ophthalmologist 6 hours after waking up with vision loss in her right eye.

  4. PMH • Monoclonal gammopathy • Left inferior pubic ramus fracture • Osteoporosis • Hypothyroidism • Hypertension • Depression & anxiety • Possible TIA in July 2000 • Macular degeneration

  5. Aspirin HCTZ Potassium Chloride Levothyroxine Paroxetine Alprazolam Fosamax Calcium with D Oxycodone/APAP Promethazine Multivitamin Meds No Known Drug Allergies

  6. FH/SH • Widowed, lives alone • Smokes 1-2 cigarettes a day • No alcohol use • Both parents had cancer when older

  7. ROS • Decreased appetite • Groin pain from pubic ramus fracture • No headaches or weakness • No fever, chills, or weight loss

  8. Differential Diagnosis 1 • Corneal Edema • Hyphema • Cataract • Vitreous Hemorrhage

  9. Differential Diagnosis 2 • Retinal Disease • Detachment • Macular Disease • Vascular Occlusion • Optic Nerve Disease • Optic Neuritis • Papillitis • Ischemic Optic Neuropathy • Giant Cell Arteritis • Trauma

  10. Medical Exam • Pleasant thin woman, mildly concerned • Vitals: Blood pressure 122/58, pulse 88 • Neck: no bruits • CV: regular without murmur or gallop • Chest: clear • Abdomen: no bruits • Extremities: no edema

  11. Ocular Exam • Visual Acuity • External Inspection • Pupillary reactions (swinging flashlight) • Ocular Motility testing • Anterior chamber depth assessment • Intraocular pressure testing • Ophthalmoscopy

  12. Pupillary Pathways

  13. Pupillary Reactions • Patient had a right eye afferent defect

  14. Anterior Chamber Depth • Shallow depth - angle closure glaucoma • Patient’s depth: normal

  15. Tonometry • Mean pressure: 15 (10-21 for 2 SD) • Patient’s intraocular pressure: 11 mmHg

  16. Retinal Detachment

  17. Central Retinal Artery Occlusion

  18. Central Retinal Vein Occlusion

  19. Papillitis

  20. Ischemic Optic Neuropathy

  21. Data • ESR 58 • Lipid Profile: • Total Cholesterol 215 • Triglycerides 214 • HDL 54 • LDL 118 • Carotid ultrasound: extensive plaque without significant stenosis

  22. Central Retinal Artery Occlusion

  23. Anecdotal Therapy • Manual compression of eye • Retrobulbar anesthesia with paracentesis of the anterior chamber • What about t-PA?

  24. EBM Search • Ovid: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, ACP Journal Club, DARE • “Retinal artery” • 8 hits, 2 relevant • ACP Journal Club: “Elderly patients had an increased 5-year risk for death, coronary events, and stroke after retinal infarction” (prognosis) • CDSR: “Interventions for acute non-arteritic central retinal artery occlusion” (treatment)

  25. Prognosis and prognostic factors of retinal infarctionGJ Hankey. BMJ 1991. Mar 2;302:499-504 • Design: Cohort study, enrolled 1977-86 followed until death or end of study (1-10 years) • Patients: 98 consecutive patients with retinal infarction at Oxford Eye Hospital • Prognostic factors: Age, gender, smoking, causes of infarction, carotid bruit, blood pressure, lipids, therapeutic interventions

  26. Prognosis, continued • Outcome measures: death, stroke, coronary events, contralateral retinal infarctions • Conclusion: Elderly patients with retinal infarction and no history of stroke had a poor 5-year prognosis for death, coronary events, and stroke particularly if they had carotid bruit and cardiomegaly.

  27. ACP Journal Club CommentaryAW Feinberg. July-Aug 1991. v115 p.24 • Results of this study similar to larger studies of amaurosis fugax • Higher risk for ipsilateral stroke for 1st 6 months • Afterwards, death from MI exceeds stroke • Study limited by lack of doppler exam • Prognosis may now be better for patients who have carotid endarterectomy

  28. Interventions for acute non-arteritic central retinal artery occlusionS Fraser. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2004. • Literature review • Selection criteria: randomized controlled trials to re-establish blood supply to retina • Search results: no trials met criteria • Conclusions: There is not enough evidence to decide which interventions would result in any beneficial or harmful effect.

  29. Case Conclusion Interventions: • Warfarin planned for 6 months • Lovastatin • Consider Plavix

  30. Useful Link • National Eye Institute (patient education) • http://www.nei.nih.gov/health/

  31. References • Bradford CA. Basic Ophthalmology. 7th Ed. 1999. American Academy of Ophthalmology. • Feinberg AW. Elderly patients had an increased 5-year risk for death, coronary events, and stroke after retinal artery infarction. ACP Journal Club 1999. v115:p.24. Abstract and commentary for Hankey GJ, Slattery JM, Warlow CP. Prognosis and prognostic factors of retinal infarction: a prospective cohort study. BMJ 1991. Mar 2;302:499-504 • Fraser s, Siriwardena D. Interventions for acute non-arteritic central retinal artery occlusion. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews.

More Related