Pupils and ptosis Flashcards

1
Q

Sphincter pupillae muscle:

A

Circular smooth muscle at inner ring of pupil.
Innervated via post ganglionic parasympathetic fibers from ciliary ganglion.
Nerves travel with CN3 to ganglion, then with short ciliary fibers of CN6
*supplied via ACh

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2
Q

Dilator pupillae muscle:

A

Single layer of myopeithelium (muscle base, epith. Apex) at pupil base.
Innervated via postganglionic sympathetic fibers from sup. Cervical ganglion.
Nerves travel with long ciliary nerves of CN6
*supplied via noradrenaline

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3
Q

Afferent pupil pathway:

A

Retinal light input > Ganglion cell axions > optic tract > split at chiasm > split before LGN > sup. Colliculus > synapse with olivary pretectal nucleus.
Afferent (retina) / Efferent (midbrain light reflex) signals processed > ipsi/contralateral Edinger Westphal > parasympathetic path.

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4
Q

Parasympathetic pupil pathway:

A

Edinger Westphal > with CN3 (accommodative axons) > cavernous sinus > synapse at ciliary ganglion > with short ciliary via subarachnoid space > iris sphincter > bilateral / equal constriction

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4
Q

Sympathetic pupil pathway:

A

1st neuron: hypothalamus > ciliospinal Centre of bulge and Waller (C8/T2)
2nd: preganglionic fibers pass stellate ganglion (lung apex) > sup. Cervical gang. (jaw)
3rd: postganglionic fibers plexus with carotid > cavernous sinus > SO fiss. With nasociliary of CN5 > long ciliary in suprachoroidal space > dilatory > mydriasis
Also innervate mullers. facial innervation splits before sup. Cervical G.

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4
Q

PERRLA examination (first test):

A

Pupils Equal Round Reactive to Light (direct/consensual) and Accommodative
1. Direct response: light activates ipsilateral EW > ipsilateral constriction
2. Consensual: light activates ipsilateral EW > contralateral EW activation > contraction
Accommodative: Near response triad > visual cortex / pupillomotor Centre in midbrain response

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4
Q

RAPD examination (second test):

A

Swinging flash test for Relative Afferent Pupil Defect.
No RAPD: equal constriction W/O radiation excluding Hippus
Mild: affected pupil constricts and redilates
Moderate: affected pupil does not change, then dilates
Severe: immediate dilation of affected pupil
Lack of consensual response is not RAPD, only examine pupil with light shown on it

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5
Q

Horners syndrome symptoms:

A

Disruption of sympathetic innervation to pupil dilator / mullers / ciliary body / facial sweat glands.
Causes Miosis / partial ptosis (1mm) / anhidrosis (not 3rd order) / accommodative excess / Conj. BV dilation
Congenital cases > Lighter/Darker Brown/Blue eyes

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5
Q

Causes of anisocoria:

A

Efferent pupil pathway dysfunction:
Physiological (EW asymmetric inhibition)
CN3 palsy
Adies tonic
Aberrant regen (CN3p / adies)
Pharmacological
Pupil damage (trauma/Sx)
AAGC

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5
Q

Common causes of horners syndrome:

A

1st : brainstem/spinal disease (vascular/tumor), diabetic neuropathy
2nd: Pancoast tumor, carotid/aortic aneurysm, neck lesion
3rd: carotid aneurysm, cavernous sinus mass, cluster headaches

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6
Q

CN3 palsy symptoms:

A

Mydriasis: Pia BV compression > pupillomotor fiber ischemia
Full ptosis: sup. Levator innervation loss
Down/out turn: Sup/Inf/medial rectus, inf. Oblique innervation loss
Thunderclap headaches

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7
Q

Causes of CN3 palsy:

A

Pupil involving: compressive lesion/aneurysm on pia BV for parasym. fibers
Pupil sparing: DM/HT > main trunk ischemia
* Giant cell arteritis (temple pain) / Pos. communicating artery aneurysm / cavernous fistula common
Myasthenia gravis imitates pupil sparing palsy

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7
Q

Adies tonic pupil:

A

Segmental denervation of post gang. Parasym. > sphincter loss > dilation and wormlike light response
Blur in affected eye with light-near dissociation (accomodative response is healthy following aberrant regen)
Caused by viral infections, usually women

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8
Q

Aberrant regen:

A

Adies: acc. Parasym. From ciliary muscle innervate iris sphincter (2 months) > light/near dissociation > reversal of anisocoria greater in dark
CN3 palsy: accom. Parasym. Regenerate denervated pupils > miosis (anisocoria reversal). Regen can come from oculomotor fibers > miosis on different gaze

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8
Q

Common pharmacologic mydriasis/miosis:

A

Tropicamide: Muscarinic antagonists > Ach receptor block > sphincter paralysis
Phenylephrine: adrenergic 1 agonist
Pilocarpine: muscarinic agonist > Ach receptor upregulation > miosis
Apraclondine: Alpha agonist > dilation (weak a1, strong a2)
Tamulosin: Alpha antagonist > adrenaline receptor block > dilator paralysis

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9
Q

Assessing anisocoria greater in light:

A

Greater in light > parasym. Loss > CN3 palsy / adies
0.1% pilocarpine > great constriction of affect pupil in early adies (<2w) from Ach upregulation
1% pilocarpine > constriction of CN3 palsy
Faliure to constrict > pharmacological/atrophic mydriasis

10
Q

Assessing anisocoria greater in dark:

A

Greater in dark > sym. Loss > horners/aberrant regen (CN3/adies)
0.5% apreclonidine > pupil dilation of affected eye w/lid raising and constriction of normal pupil. Requires 1w post onset for a1 upregulation
1% hydroxyamphetamine > dilation of affected eye if 1/2 order neuron lesion (release of 3rd neuron noradrenaline)

10
Q

Simple congenital/myopathic ptosis:

A

Usually unilateral, from fibrotic LPS > raised lid on downgaze + indistinct lid crease
Blepharophimosis syndrome is a type > horizontally short palpebral fissure with no LPS function

10
Q

Types of ptosis:

A

Myogenic (MG, simple congenital, blepharophimosis)
Neurogenic (CN3, horner, marcus gunn)
Mechanical
Aponeurotic (LPS disinsertion)
Pseudooptosis

11
Q

Myasthenia gravis:

A

Autoimmune disorder > auto antibodies against Ach receptors of striated muscle > weakness
Causes limb weakness, lack of expression, ptosis +_ diplopia worsening over the day.
Tested via 1minute upgaze, or ice pack for 2m (improves neurotransmission)

11
Q

Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia:

A

Most common mitochondrial myopathy > ATP dysfunction > EOM fatigue
Progressive disease, noted in teenages
Bilateral ptosis > then leteral gaze > down gaze
Rarely causes diplopia as loss is symmetrical

11
Q

Marcus Gunn Jaw winking syndrome:

A

Synkinetic neurogenic ptosis from CN5(V3 mandibular) anastamosis with CN3 > wink reflex on jaw contraction

12
Q

Aponeurotic ptosis:

A

Lid disinence/redundancy > high lid crease which remains on down gaze

12
Q

Measuring ptosis:

A

Margin reflex distance: 4mm from corneal reflex and upper lid
Palpebral fissure: difference between eyes: 2/3/4mm mild/moderate/severe
Levator function: pressure brow, measure upper lid change from downgaze and upgaze (15mm normal)
Upper lid crease: distance between lid margin and crease in downgaze (8mm normal).

13
Q

physiological anisocoria:

A

1/3 prevelance
longstanding, <1mm discrepancy, stable in light/dark

14
Q

common pharmacologic agents in pupil dilation

A

Scopolamine patches
nasal vasoconstrictors
antiperspirants
opioids
insecticides

15
Q

clinical assessment of horners

A

Dilation lag of mitotic pupil in dark (5-15s) > greater anisocoria at 5s, lesser by 15.
W/ no abnormality in near response