HEENT eyes Flashcards

(119 cards)

1
Q

the globe of the eye is called…

the cornea is more curved ….

A

bulbus oculi

anterior

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

the cornea curve is the main reason to wear glasses (t/f)

A

True

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

what is the anterior and posterior segment made of

A

P

A

a: cornea, iris, ciliary body, and lens

P: vitreous retina, choroid, and optic nerve

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

The two fluid-filled chambers within the anterior segment:
Anterior Chamber: space between ……..
Posterior Chamber: area …..

Both are filled with clear aqueous fluid.

A

A: between cornea and iris

P: behind iris and in front of vitreous

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

what is the purpose of the chambers of the eye

A

filled with aqueous fluid to nourish the cornea and lens

maintain IOP

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

blood in the anterior chamber is called

A

hyphema

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

pus/white cell accum in the AC is called

A

hypopyon

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Hordeolum / Chalazion is

associated with

Rx:

A

blepharitis/ acne rosacea

warm/hot compresses with digital massage / Btracin or Emycin

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

well defined lid nodule is … in hordeolum/chalazion

A

chronic

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

external hordeolum (stye) is inflammatory lesion of the anterior eyelid due to obstruction of …. glands

tender or nontender?

A

Moll and Zeis

tender

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

chalazion, which is internal hordeolum, is localized inflammation on the posterior eyelid due to the obstruction of …. gland

tender or nontender?

A

meibomain gland

nontender

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

blepharitis is common, chronic inflammation of ..

A

eyelid margin

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

blepharitis Symptoms is

A

flux through day and weeks

burning, itching, FBS, tearing, lid erythema

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

blepharitis signs

A

crusty, red thickened lid margin with bvs or oil glands

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

blepharitis is assoc. with ..

A

dry eyes, rosacea, chalazia

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

blepharitis treatment

A

-Lid scrubs (e.g. Ocusoft; Avenova, dilute baby shampoo) to clean base of lashes

-Hot Compress (e.g. Bruder Mask) 3 x day for 10 min.

-Topical Emycin ung or azithromycin gel drop
or oral doxycycline 100mg bid x 1wk then qd x 3 weeks (if its rlly bad)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

entropion

is
symptoms

A

inward turning of eyelid margin

Ocular irritation, FBS, tearing, red eyeSuperficial Punctate Keratitis (SPK), abrasions, scarring can result from lashes contacting globe (sclera/cornea).

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

ectropion

is
s/s

A

outward turning of eyelid margin

+ Tearing, eye or eyelid irritation or may be asymptomatic, Superior Punctate Keratitis (SPK) inferiorly from corneal exposure

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

Ectropion / Entropion Treatment

A

Treat if corneal involvement
lubricating agents (artificial tears/gels)
antibiotic ointments (emycin or bacitracin ophthalmic ung qhs)
bandage contact lens
Epilate any inward turning lashes touching cornea (trichiasis)
Definitive treatment may require lid surgery with oculoplastics.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

lacrimal system takes tear from external eyes to nasal cavity. it consist of …4…

A

puncta
canaliculi
lacimal sac
nasolacrimal duct

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

inflammation of the lacrimal sac is

called:
s/s:

tx:

A

Dacryocystitis
pain, swelling, excessive tearing (epiphora)

oral antibiotics cephalexin
hot compress

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

Acute angle closure glaucoma
Uveitis / Iritis
Herpes simplex keratitis
Conjunctivitis
Subconjunctival hemorrhage

are all causes of …

A

red eye

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
23
Q

acute angle closure glaucoma symptoms

A

severe ocular pain
redness
halo rings
N/V
headache
blurred vision

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
24
Q

acute angle closure glaucoma, the aqueous fluid can not drain out, therefore the IOP … increases/decreases

A

increases

normal is 10-21
bad IOP >50

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
25
high risk groups for acute angle glaucoma is
Shallow anterior chamber Hyperopia (farsightedness) Elderly /Thickening cataract with age (+) family hx of angle closure Asian / Inuits
26
treatment for acute angle glaucoma
Lower IOP with meds (all topical IOP gtts and oral acetazolamide two 250mg tabs) -Immediate but temporizing Peripheral Iridotomy (PI) -Definitive Remember the fellow eye
27
Swelling/inflammation of uvea (middle layer of eye) Pain, red eye, photophobia
Anterior Uveitis:
28
choroid/retina involvement Floaters, visual disturbance
Posterior Uveitis:
29
s/s of uveitis, which is often caused by underlying systemic conditions and can lead to permanent vision loss are
red eye, blurry vision, photophobia, floaters
30
when looking at an eye with uveitis, you will see
Keratic precipitates (KPs are white cells on corneal endothelium) cells & flare in AC, synechiae ciliary flush vitritis, retinal hemes
31
cause of Uveitis
autoimmune disorders, infections, malignancy, toxins, or idiopathic.
32
Common etiology of anterior uveitis is
HLA-B27 positive autoimmune disease Ankylosing spondylitis JRA = juveniles rheumatoid arthritis Crohn's disease = inflame. Bowel disease Ulcerative colitis = inflame. Bowel disease = inflame + ulcers Reiter's syndrome – reactive arthritis = men
33
cause for posterior uveitis are
Sarcoidosis, Lyme, Toxoplasmosis
34
you see iris and lens synechiae. the treatment for uveitis is
Cycloplegic (cyclopentolate 1% tid or atropine 1% if severe) topical steroid (pred acetate 1% q 1-6 hrs or Durezol tid. Taper based on response.
35
you see unilateral red eye, FBS, photophobia, and history of previous episodes. you do corneal staining and see macro punctate and classic dendritic keratitis. the pt has
Herpes simplex keratitis
36
HSV type 1 reactivation causes
herpetic keratitis (classic dendritic ulcer)
37
to treat dendritic keratitis, you should use
topically with trifluridine drops 9x/d or ganciclovir gel 5x/d Oral antivirals: acyclovir 400mg po 5x/d or valacyclovir 500mg po tid x 7d Avoid topical steroids = makes it worse
38
conjunctive covers the front of the eyes and lines the inside of the...
eyelids
39
3 types of conjunctivitis
Bacterial Viral Allergic
40
t/f all 3 types of conjunctivitis (bacterial, viral, allergic) has hyperemia
true
41
t/f all 3 types of conjunctivitis (bacterial, viral, allergic) has discharge
true bacterial -purulent viral - serous allergy - stringy
42
t/f all 3 types of conjunctivitis (bacterial, viral, allergic) has preauricular lymphadenopathy
F, only viral
43
t/f all 3 types of conjunctivitis (bacterial, viral, allergic) has Upper respiratory symptoms
False bacterial = none viral - URI allergy - hay fever
44
conjunctivitis treatment for bacterial is
Topical antibiotics Polytrim, ofloxacin, q4h polysporin ointment tid fluoroquinolones Cool compresses
45
viral conjunctivitis treatment
Cool compresses Topical lubrication Caused by adenovirus Antibiotics will not help CONTAGIOUS Precautions to prevent spread Handwashing Clean with alcohol or dilute bleach
46
allergy conjunctivitis treatment
Topical antihistamines/mast cell stabilizers (Pataday, Zaditor, Bepreve) for acute and chronic allergies (steroid gtts can be used but IOP needs to monitored!) Oral antihistamines Cool compresses, artificial tears
47
causes of Subconjunctival Hemorrhage
Valsalva: coughing, sneezing; rubbing Idiopathic Blood thinners (aspirin, warfarin) Blood clotting disorder (rarely)
48
do you need to treatment Subconjunctival Hemorrhage
No, unless recent trauma and recurrent goes away in 1-2 weeks by itself
49
Pinguecula/Pterygium Dry eyes (keratoconjunctivitis sicca) Corneal abrasions/ulcers Corneal foreign bodies causes
red eye
50
Pinguecula /Pterygium s/s
irritation, redness, without s/s
51
Yellow-white, flat or slightly raised conjunctival lesion NOT involving cornea is...
Pinguecula
52
Wedge shaped fold of fibrovascular tissue arising from the interpalpebral conjunctiva and extending onto the cornea.
Pterygium
53
Pinguecula/Pterygium Treatment
Protect eyes from sun, dust, wind, UV c sunglasses / safety goggles Lubricate with artificial tear drops to reduce irritation (qid) If inflamed can use NSAID (ketorolac qid) or topical antihistamine/mast cell stabilizer (Pataday qd) Surgical removal only if severe or if pterygium threatens visual axis
54
s/s of dry eye syndrome
itching, dry eyes, burning sensation, FBS, excessive tearing following by dryness, burning, redness unlateral worsened by wind, smoke, low humidity prolonged reading
55
dry eye treatment is
Artificial tears, refresh, systane, or blink stop smoking humidifer restasis, xiidra, ceque punctal plugs EFA (fish oil/flax)
56
pt has pain, photophobia, tearing, redness and a hx of itching their eyes. what is it and how do you treat it
corneal abrasion Fluoroquinolone gtt or ophthalmic ung at least qid Cycloplegic agent if iritis Never Rx topical anesthetic (delays healing)
57
pt has pain, redness, photophobia, tearing and a Hx of contact lens use. upon staining the eye, you see a white lesion. what is it and how do you treat it
corneal ulcer Fluoroquinolone gtt or ophthalmic ung at least qid Cycloplegic agent if iritis Never Rx topical anesthetics Discard and d/c CL use
58
what is the most common cause of contact lens related corneal infection
pseudomonas aeruginosa
59
danger signs for the eye that are not conjunctivitis are
reduced visual acuity = serious ocular disease refer pt esp if acutely reduced ciliary flush = redness maximal near cornea
60
abnormal pupils needs
referral
61
therapeutic warns to not use topical anesthetics because
its toxic and can cause corneal ulceration never prescribe use only for exam
62
topical steroids should only be prescribed by eye doctor bc it causes
cataracts glaucoma makes HSV and fungal infections worse
63
what is the leading cause of legal blindness in the usa, and the risk factors
macular degeneration (ARMD) heredity advanced age drusen body tobacco
64
ARMD etiology is unknown, but it is manifested by
drusen retinal pigment epithelial atrophy subretinal neovascular membrane loss of central vision
65
what are the two types of ARMD?
dry and wet
66
explain characteristics of dry ARMD
slowly drusen, pigment layer atrophy bilateral peripheral vision intact can lead to wet type of ARMD
67
ARMD dry type management
no cure vitamins AREDS1 - reduce progression by 25 %. does not contain beta-carotene which can increase lung cancer in smokers low vision aids monitor for wet type with AMSLER grid
68
ARMD wet type characteristics
choroidal neovascular membrane (CNV) edema, hemorrhage metamorphopsia = sudden decrease of vision fibrosis macular scar
69
ARMD wet type management
changes to wet type = ER F1 angiography/ OCT imaging Anti-VEGF injections: Avastin, lucentis, eylea, macugen PDT or laser obliteration of CNV unilateral so monitor for recurrence and other eye
70
what test can detect early retinal conditions
OTC - optical coherence tomography
71
dry age related macular degeneration is also called
nonexudative
72
diabetics can develop
diabetic macular edema
73
what is the leading cause of irreversible blindness in the world?
glucoma
74
what causes glaucoma
IOP that damages the optic nerve = visual field loss
75
Primary open angle glaucoma characteristics
mostly no S/S S/s noticed when late in disease early detecting = important if blindness is to be prevent
76
glaucoma risk factors
age, FHx, diabetics, CV, surgery, steriods, truama
77
Characteristics of Glaucomatous ONH
Enlarged cup; c/d ratio >0.65 (average is 0.3) Hemorrhage within 1dd of ONH Thinning of neuro-retinal rim esp. sup. / inf. (does not obey the ISNT Rule) Asymmetric cupping between patients eyes
78
how does vision loss happen in POAG
loss of retinal ganglion cells leads to enlarged cup to disk ration. this happens typically at the superior and inferior poles, leading to a vertical oval cup or notching
79
what test would you do to test visual field in POAG
automated perimetry youll see loss of vision in the bottom
80
how to treat POAG
medications to lower BP = IOP lowering eye drops *prostaglandins*, beta-blockers, alpha agonists, carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (CAI) , combinations Laser Trabeculoplasty (SLT, ALT) *hole in the trabecular meshwork to release pressure Filtration Surgery (Trabeculectomy) MIGS (Minimally-invasive Glaucoma Surgeries) i-Stent, Cypass, Trabectome) *istent = for awueous to drain out and to lower pressure*
81
what causes floaters and flashes in the eyes
Vitreous separates from the anterior retinal (floaters) Some strands remain attached to retina (flashes)
82
typical horseshoe tear of the retina will be shown on
retinal detachment
83
untreated retinal detachment can lead to
to partial or total loss of retinal function (blindness)
84
retina detachment is an emergent condition because once the macula is off, the prognosis for good vision .... treatment include
decreases surgical repair with laser, cryopexy, buckle, or pneumatic retinopexy
85
risk factors for RD
high myopia (near sight) trauma age prepvous ocular surgery
86
RD symptoms
Sudden appearance of many floaters Sudden flashes of light, typically in the periphery A shadow or curtain blocking part of your field of vision
87
cataracts is
an opacity (clouding) of the normal clear lens
88
risk factors for cataracts include
age uv radiation steriods uveitis diabetes trauma
89
cataract symptoms are
glare, esp in night driving
90
cortical cataract is
PERIPHERAL SPICULES EARLY, VISION GOOD INITIALLY
91
nuclear cataract is
shift toward myopia and color shift to yellow
92
subcapsular cataract is
early trouble reading
93
cataract management if s/s/vision loss interfere with job is
surgery multifocal and toric implant
94
posterior capsular opacification is common after... and is ...
cataract surgery secondary clouding of posterior capsule = decrease in vision/ glare
95
tx for posterior capsular opacification is
YAG laser capsulotomy
96
diabetes mellitus is a
diabetic retinopathy and leading cause of blindness
97
Risk factors for diabetic retinopathy are
duration of diabetes control of blood sugar insulin dependency hypertension anemia
98
after 5 years of TYPE 1 Diabetics, people will have a ... percent chance of having diabetic retinopathy (DR) after 15 years of TYPE 1 Diabetics, people will have a ... percent chance of having diabetic retinopathy (DR)
a) 23 % b) 80%
99
if the capillaries leak and are occluded, and you see the following RED SPOTS (HEMORRHAGES, MICROANEURYSMS) HARD EXUDATES IN CIRCINATE CONFIGURATION COTTON WOOL SPOTS MACULAR EDEMA = vision affected VENOUS ENGORGEMENT, BEADING then the pt has
nonproliferative DR
100
if you see INCREASED RETINAL ISCHEMIA NEOVASCULARIZATION, INITIALLY AT OPTIC DISC FIBROUS TISSUE PROLIFERATION VITREOUS HEMORRHAGE TRACTION RETINAL DETACHMENT then the pt has
proliferative DR
101
how do you treat DR
yearly dilated eye exam control glucose levels control HTN Anti VEGF injections or Laser treatment of the focal leakage areas Pan Retinal photocoagulation (PRP) vitrectomy
102
what are the complications for DR
NEOVASCULAR GLAUCOMA TRACTION RETINAL DETACHMENT VITREOUS HEMORRHAGE CATARACT
103
central retinal artery is a ..
true end artery
104
Hypertension changes in the eyes, you wil see
arterial narrowing flame (splinter) hemorrhages cotton wool spots hard exudates, macular star edema of the disc
105
ARTERIOSCLEROTIC CHANGES
WIDENING OF ARTERIAL STRIPE A/V NICKING COPPER COLORED ARTERIES SILVER WIRE ARTERIES
106
AMAUROSIS FUGAX is
Transient loss of vision in one eye (monocular)
107
AMAUROSIS FUGAX is characteristic
No pain Lasts 1-10 minutes Total or altitudinal vision loss (“like a window shade”) Vision returns to normal
108
what causes AMAUROSIS FUGAX
vascular or hear disease temporary lack of blood flow to retina from emboli in central retinal artery Often no emboli visible on fundus exam
109
is AMAUROSIS FUGAX a form of TIA? and how do you treat is
yes ASAP ER/ Stroke center MRI, urgent carotid and cardiac studies neurology consultation
110
Uncorrected ..... are a leading cause of visual impairment worldwide.
refractive errors
111
what is refractive errors
a problem with focusing light onto the retina due to the shape of the eye
112
is emmetropia a refractive error?
no, this is 20/20 vision. the eye is able to focus light on retina with effort
113
what are the 4 types of refractive errors
Myopia (nearsighted) Hyperopia (farsighted) Astigmatism (nonspherical curvature) Presbyopia (loss of focusing ability of lens)
114
if the cornea is spherical and light is refracted and focused equally in all meridians , then the person will have
zero astigmatism
115
In astigmatism, the surface of the cornea has a .... in one meridian than in the other meridian.
stronger curvature
116
what causes presbyopia, farsightedness
normal result of age lens of eyes becomes thicker and less flexible
117
lens that cannot adjuct in presbyopia, causes the image to be focused .... the retina
beyond
118
what test do you do to determine the Rx for glasses
a refraction
119
what is the most common refractive surgery procedures
Laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) and Photorefractive keratectomy (PRK)