cornea- abrasion and herpes keratitis Flashcards

1
Q

what is a corneal abrasion?

A

scratches or damage to the cornea

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2
Q

what is the cornea

A

the outer layer at the front of your eye. helps focus light

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3
Q

common causes of corneal abrasion

A
Contact lenses (*pseudomonas infection*)
Foreign bodies
Finger nails
Eyelashes
Entropion (inward turning eyelid)

*diff diagnosis is herpes keratitis

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4
Q

how does a corneal abrasion present?

A
History of contact lenses or foreign body
Painful red eye
Foreign body sensation
Watering eye
Blurring vision
Photophobia
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5
Q

how is a corneal abrasion diagnosed?

A

A fluorescein stain is applied to the eye to diagnose a corneal abrasion. This is a yellow-orange colour. The stain collects in abrasions or ulcers, highlighting them.

Slit lamp examination may be used in more significant abrasions.

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6
Q

management of corneal abrasion

A

referral for same day assessment by an ophthalmologist for any red eye

secondary care:
Simple analgesia (e.g. paracetamol)
Lubricating eye drops can improve symptoms
Antibiotic eye drops (i.e. chloramphenicol)
Bring the patient back after 1 week to check it has healed
Cyclopentolate eye drops dilate the pupil and improve significant symptoms, particularly photophobia. These are not usually necessary.

if uncomplicated, will heal over 2-3 days

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7
Q

what is herpes keratitis

A

inflammation of the cornea

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8
Q

what causes herpes keratitis

A

Viral infection with herpes simplex (mostly effects the epithelial layer of the cornea) (1’ / recurrent)

Bacterial infection with pseudomonas or staphylococcus

Fungal infection with candida or aspergillus

Contact lens acute red eye (CLARE)

Exposure keratitis is caused by inadequate eyelid coverage (e.g. eyelid ectropion)

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9
Q

herpes keratitis vs stromal keratiis

A

?herpes keratitis only effects the epithelial layer of the cornea so if there’s inflammation of the storm (between epithelium and endothelium) then this is ‘stroll keratitis’

complications- stromal necrosis, vascularisation and scarring and can lead to corneal blindness.

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10
Q

how does herpes keratitis present

A
painful red eye
Photophobia
Vesicles around the eye
Foreign body sensation
Watering eye
Reduced visual acuity. This can vary from subtle to significant.
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11
Q

how is herpes keratitis diagnosed?

A

stain with fluorescein = dendritic ulcers (branching and spreading of the ulcer)

slit lamp exam
corneal swabs or scrapings to isolate the virus for viral culture or PCR

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12
Q

management of herpes keratitis

A

Aciclovir (topical or oral)
Ganciclovir eye gel
Topical steroids may be used alongside antivirals to treat stromal keratitis

*if scarring caused by stroll keratitis= corneal transplant

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13
Q

presentation of keratits

A

keratitis = corneal infection
cornea is breached which allows pathogens to enter and cause inflammation.

micropurulent discharge suggest bacterial keratitis (pseudomonas auerginosa, staphylococcus aureus)

hypopyon= leukocytes/pus in the anterior chamber of the eye

sudden onset occula rpain
erythema
photophobia

Ix: swab for culture
Tx: topical antibiotics

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14
Q

corneal ulcer vs corneal abrasion

A

ulcer: pain, photophobia, foreign body sensation, blurred vision
abrasion: less likely to have blurred vision, less likely to cause reduction in vision and less likely to re-occur. less likely to cause corneal oedema.

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15
Q

retinoblastoma

A

O/E white pupilary reflex

enucleation with chemotherapy / radiotherapy

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