CRVO Flashcards

1
Q

What is CRVO? and how does it occur?

A

CRVO = the occlusion of the central retinal veins at the level of the lamiina cribosa or just behind.

Cause = Thrombosis (blood clot)

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2
Q

What is the pathogenesis of CRVO?

A

A
1. Occlusion of the central retinal vein - therefore oxygenated blood can’t get to the eye = hypoxia

  1. Hypoxia causes blood vessels to get damaged.
  2. This causes leakage = haemorrhages and oedema.
  3. Leukocytes cause capillary occlusion = no oxygen transfer to cells, leading to retinal ischaemia.
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3
Q

what causes a thrombus?

A

Physical changes
* Arteriosclerosis of neighbouring artery

-shares common advantages sheath. artery on top of vein hardens. and compresses it we get a back log of blood. that becomes a clot . then get thrombus formed.

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* Vessel wall changes e.g. phlebitis

-thrombosis due to physical changes in the wall making ut hard for the blood to go through

-inflammation. of vein , vein becomes thicker and swollen = get blood clot .

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* Raised IOP (>30mmHg)
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Blood abnormality
* High blood viscosity
* Coagulation disorders

when someone has blood disease blood itself is wquite thick so cold easily form clots and that can form a thrombus..

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4
Q

What are the risk factors of CRVO?

A
  • Age 50+ (90%)
  • Hypertension
  • Hyper-lipidaemia
  • Diabetes
  • Smoking
  • Raised IOP (>30mmHg)
  • Oral contraceptive pill (if predisposed)
  • Thrombophilia
  • Systemic inflammatory disease e.g. Sarcoidosis, Behcet’s disease
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Chronic renal failure

OAG
CVD

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5
Q
A

Tortuous dilated retinal veins in all 4 quadrants
* Round/blot and flame haemorrhages
* CWS?
* Possible macula oedema
* Possible disc oedema

cheese tomato pizza appearance

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6
Q

What are the two types of CRVO?

A
  1. Non-Ischaemic (75% of cases, concern = turning into ischaemic CRVO.
  2. Ischaemic (more serve, concern = could develop neovascularisation)
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7
Q

What are the 3 symptoms for Non-Ischaemic CRVO?

A

1.Sudden onset,
2.unilateral,
3. blurred vision (6/36-6/60)

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8
Q

What are the 3 symptoms for Ischaemic CRVO?

A
  1. Sudden,
  2. unilateral,
    3.severe visual loss (<6/60-CF)
    Occasionally presentation may be with pain, redness and photophobia due to neovascular glaucom
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9
Q

What are the 7 signs of Non-Ischaemic CRVO?

A
  1. Tortuous dilated retinal veins in all 4 quadrants.
  2. Round/Blot/Flame Haemorrhages
  3. Occasional CWS
  4. Mild/Mod Macula Oedema
  5. Mild/Mod Disc Oedema
  6. Mild/Absent RAPD
  7. Acute signs resolve over 6-12 months
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10
Q

What are 7 main signs of Ischaemic CRVO?

A
  1. Tortuous and engorgement of retinal veins in all 4 quadrants.
  2. Extensive deep haemorrhages
  3. Multiple CWS
  4. Extensive Oedema
  5. Optic Disc Oedema
  6. Marked RAPD
  7. Acute signs resolve over 9-12 months
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11
Q
A
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12
Q

What is the prognosis/concern of non ischemic CRVO?

A

Main concern: possibility of conversion to ischaemic

Approx 50% will return to normal/near normal VA

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13
Q

What is the prognosis/concern of ischemic crvo?

A

Main concern: development of neovascularisation

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14
Q

What are the 3 referral options for CRVO?

A
  • If IOP normal + non-ischaemic = ROUTINE <13 weeks-
    Refer to ophthalmology
  • Refer to GP- for cardiovascular work up
  • If elevetated IOP (up to 40mmHg) + Ischaemic = URGENT ( within 1 week)
  • Refer to ophthalmology
  • Refer to GP
  • If IOP > 40mmHg + Ischaemic = EMERGENCY

If you are unsure whether it is ischaemic: URGENT referral

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15
Q

What is the management of CRVO?

A

opthalmology:
- OCT- A + FFA
- For non ischaemic - follow up every 3-6 months every 2-3 yrs.
- For ischaemic - follow up monthly for 6 months.

(If macula Oedema present -> Intravitreal
Anti VEGF agents),Intra-vitrealsteroids

(If neovascularisation -> Laser pan-retinal photocoagulation) (LASER PRP)

If FFA shows 10DD of capillary non prefusion = ischaemic
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GP

GP = manage BP, cholesterol, thyroid function + any other systemic disease

» Identify underlying cause
» Identify any underlying systemic disease
» Treat underlying disease and address risk factors

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16
Q

Investigations

A

FA
OCT
fundus photography
pupils-test for RAPD