Ophthalmology Flashcards

1
Q

When does optic nerve myelination complete?

A

2 years old

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2
Q

When does eye development begin?

A

5th week of gestation

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3
Q

At 30 weeks what can the eye do?

A

Response to light, pupils reactive (some may not be reactive until 32 weeks)

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4
Q

When does conjugate horizontal gaze develop? Conjugate vertical gaze?

A

Horizontal - at birth for full term

Vertical - 2 months of age

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5
Q

What causes leukocoria?

A

Leukocoria = white reflex

  1. Most common cause: cataracts
  2. Less common: retinoblastoma, coloboma, ROP, retinal detachment, vitreous hemorrhage, intraocular inflammation
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6
Q

What causes ptosis?

A

Dysfunction of levator palpebral muscle (cranial nerve III)

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7
Q

What is the most common area involved in ROP?

A

Zone 3

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8
Q

What does threshold ROP mean?

A

50% progression to stage 5 (retinal detachment)

ROP zone I or II with at least 5 contiguous clock hours (or 8 total), with plus disease

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9
Q

What babies get ROP screening?

A

All < or = to 32w0d OR bw < or = 1500g

Some over 32w0d with resp instabiliy

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10
Q

When does ROP screening occur?

A

4-6 weeks of age or 31-32 weeks cga, whichever is later

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11
Q

What treatment does threshold disease require?

A

Laser or cryotherapy within 2-3 days

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12
Q

What is a coloboma?

A

Defect in iris of the eye (pupil abnormally shaped)

Associated with trisomy 13 and deletion 13q

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13
Q

What trisomy has hypotelorism? Hypertelorism?

A

Hypotelorism: trisomy 13 (also small eyes and coloboma), meckel gruber, williams
Hypertelorism: trisomy 8, apert, deletion 13q, digeorge, noonan

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14
Q

What is most common cause of conjuctivitis in 1st month of life?

A

Chlamydia (treat with oral erythromycin)

Occurs in 1/2 of colonized mothers

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15
Q

When does gonorrhea conjunctivitis occur?

A

2-5 days of age, prevented with erythromycin at birth. Copious, purulent drainage. Treat with cephalosporin

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16
Q

What congenital infection has highest incidence of chorioretinitis?

A

Toxo - 80-90% of infants will have b/l chorioretinitis

CMV - second (20%)

17
Q

What syndromes are associated with glaucoma?

A

Sturge Weber and Stickler

18
Q

When does visual evoked potential reach adult level?

A

6 months

19
Q

What congenital infection is most likely to give cataracts?

A

Rubella (50% of infants will have bilateral catarcts)

Also seen in HSV, varicella, and toxo

20
Q

What is inheritance pattern of isolated congenital cataract?

A

Autosomal dominant (accounts for 25% of infants with cataracts)

21
Q

What is the most common cause of neonatal seizures? Second most common?

A
  1. Global cerebral hypoxic ischemia (40%)

2. Focal cerebral hypoxic ischemia (17-18%)

22
Q

What is the mortality rate and neurodevelopmental outcome for neonatal seizures?

A

Mortality: 10%
Disability: 54%