Loss Of Vision/Blurry Vision Flashcards

1
Q

Sequence of events

A

Open question
Timeline- how did it start, sudden or gradual decline, was it like a curtain coming down, how has it progressed since then

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2
Q

Symptom analysis

A

Clarify- what do you mean, is whole vision blurry or are you missing parts of your vision, do you see double or just unclear, are the images side by side or above one another, does it go away if you occlude one eye
Site- both eyes or one, entire eye or part of it, tunnel vision, which quadrant of vision is missing
Central vision- is that affected when you look directly at something
Colour vision- changes
Remaining vision- how much remains, can you recognise faces, read small text or see any light
Triggers- did anything start this, any history of trauma

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3
Q

Systems review

A

Ophthalmology- pain in eye or on movement, headache, redness in eyes, flashes and floaters

NS- zig zag lines, weakness or pins and needles, trouble with speech

HTN (morning headaches on waking), temporal arteritis (cramping pain in jaw when chewing, painful to comb hair), PMR symptoms (think GCA)

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4
Q

Patients perspective

A

Feelings and impact on life
Ideas
Concerns
Expectations

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5
Q

Background information

A

PMH- diabetes, HTN, AF, trouble with eyes, glasses, ophthalmology screening
DH
FH
SH- do they drive

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6
Q

Central retinal artery occlusion

A

Sudden onset of persistent monocular visual loss
Exact field defect depends on whether central or branch vessel occluded
Amaurosis fugax, hypercoaguable state, atherosclerotic risk factors may be present

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7
Q

Central retinal vein occlusion

A

Acute painless monocular mild to moderate visual loss

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8
Q

Temporal arteritis

A

Recent severe headache over the scalp region
Jaw claudication, scalp tenderness, proximal muscle stiffness and aching
Transient, permanent visual loss, blurred vision, amaurosis fugax
Usually 55+
Can affect other eye

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9
Q

Optic neuritis

A

Often young female patients and first presentation of MS
Deep pain associated with eye movements and central scotoma
Symptoms exacerbated by raising body temperature (Uhtoffs phonomenon) eg. Exercise or hot baths
Neurological symptoms in past such as weakness or parasthesia
Reduced colour vision

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10
Q

Retinal detachment

A

Flashes of light, floaters, peripheral scotoma

Risks- myopia (thin retina), recent cataract surgery, diabetes

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11
Q

Vitreous detachment

A

Acute visual disturbance, in middle aged and elderly
Chronic floaters, with sudden increase in number of floaters and possibly flashing lights as the vitreous starts to pull away from retina
May result in retinal detachment or vitriol haemorrhage
Visual acuity not affected and usually self limiting

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12
Q

Vitreous haemorrhage

A

Spontaneous bleeding from retinal vessels into the vitreous
Sudden onset of altered vision, blobs and floaters
Visual acuity is variable depending on site and size of haemorrhage
Red hue to vision

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13
Q

CVA

A

Sudden onset of homonymous visual field defect

Weakness, parasthesia, dysphasia, ataxia

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14
Q

Glaucoma

A

Usually asymptomatic
Visual field loss with scotomas in nasal field
Blurring and haloes around light
Afro-Caribbean, diabetes, advanced age, myopia, FH

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15
Q

Cataract

A

Blurred vision, glare (starbursts) around lights, increasing myopia, yellowish/brown discolouration, monocular Diplopia and poor night vision
Gradual worsening of symptoms
Advancing age and diabetes

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16
Q

Macular degeneration

A

Gradual onset of worsening visual acuity and a central scotoma
Images become distorted
Straight lines become wavy

17
Q

Retinitis pigmentosa

A
Decreased visual acuity and loss of peripheral vision 
Inherited condition (50% autosomal dominant)
18
Q

Optic neuropathy

A

If compression lesion- may have oculomotiliy defect or isolated visual field defect
Can be inherited
Nutritional or toxic causes- excessive alcohol, smoking, B12 deficiency

19
Q

Investigations

A
Eye examination (visual fields, acuity, Ophthalmoscopy)
OCT (ocular coherence topography) 

Other tests depend on suspected cause;

ESR temporal artery biopsy
Fundus fluorescin angiography
USS
Tonometry
Carotid Doppler and echocardiogram for sources of emboli
MRI (MS)
Electrophysiology if neuropathy of unknown cause

20
Q

What to ask in every ophthalmology station

A

Do you wear glasses or contacts, or have you ever worn either of them

21
Q

Myasthenia Gravis

A

Can present with double vision

Muscle fatigability, worse in evening etc.