glaucoma clinical Flashcards

1
Q

what is glaucoma

A
  • Irreversible, progressive disease of the optic nerve, if left untreated, will progress to tunnel vision and blindness
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2
Q

how does glaucoma progress

A

○ Blurring at peripheral parts of the eye
○ Dims and constricts outer vision
○ Eventually peripheral vision disappears

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3
Q

what is the optic nerve

A
  • Made up of cells in the retina - carrying information to the brain from the retina
    • Ciliary body produces aqueous fluid and passes over the eye before leaving in one or two ways
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4
Q

what is the optic nerve head

A

○ Where the optic nerve (and blood vessels) exits the eye via the laminar cribosa
○ Blind spot

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5
Q

what are the 3 types of glaucoma

A

congenital vs acquired
primary vs secondary
open vs closed angle

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6
Q

what is primary angle closure glaucoma

A

○ Classically affects small hypermetropic eyes - long sighted
○ Irido-corneal angle occlusion

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7
Q

what are the symptoms of acute primary closed angle glaucoma

A

§ Pupil block
§ Painful red eye
§ Blurred vision
§ N&V due to pain
§ Mid-dilated pupil
§ Cloudy cornea
§ Shallow anterior chamber
§ Elevated intra-ocular pressure
§ Closed angle at gonioscopy
§ Glaukomflecken
§ Possible cataract

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8
Q

how is primary angle closure treated - acute an chronic

A

laser iridotomy
cataract surgery
medicine to lower IOP

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9
Q

which classes of drugs can induce primary angle closure glaucoma

A

topical mydriatic drugs
nebulised drugs
oral/iv drugs

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10
Q

which topical mydriatic drugs can induce primary angle closure glaucoma

A

Tropicamide, cyclopentolate, phenylephrine, atropine

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11
Q

which nebulised drugs can cause primary angle closure glaucoma

A

Ipratropium, salbutamol, ephedrine

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12
Q

which oral/IV drugs can cause primary angle closure glaucoma

A

TCAs
SSRIs
anticholinergic - oxybutynin/atropine

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13
Q

which other drugs can cause primary angle closure glaucoma

A

§ Topiramate
§ Hydrochlorothiazide
§ Acetazolamide
§ Quinine
§ Tetracyclines
§ Pilocarpine
OTC flu remedies

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14
Q

what is primary open angle glaucoma

A
  • Most common type in the UK
    • Initially asymptomatic
      Usually slow and progressive
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15
Q

what are the causes of POAG

A
  • Not understood
  • Raised IOP
  • Mechanical
    • Movement of laminar cribosa causing damage
  • Ischaemic
    • At optic nerve head
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16
Q

what are the risk factors for POAG

A
  • IOP
  • Age
  • Genetics
  • Family history
  • Myopia - short sightedness
  • Type of optic nerve head
  • Vascular or haematological
  • Neurogenic
17
Q

what screening options are there for POAG

A
  • Optic nerve imaging
  • Visual field testing
  • Risk factor assessment
    • IOP
    • Family history
    • Other risk factors
  • Slit-lamp examination and gonioscopy
18
Q

what are the treatment options for POAG

A
  • Various drops can be used
    ○ Reduce aqueous production
    ○ Increased outflow of aqueous
    • Laser
      ○ Selective laser trabeculoplasty improves drainage
      ○ Cyclodiode laser therapy reduces aqueous production
      § Last resort
    • Surgery
      ○ Lots of options
      ○ Trabeculectomy is gold standard
19
Q

what are prostaglandin analogues

A
  • Latanoprost, Travoprost, Bimatoprost
    OD ON - increase uveoscleral road
20
Q

s/e of prostaglandin analogues

A
  • Systemic s/e are rare
  • Ocular s/e
    • Lash growth
    • Iris pigmentation
    • Periocular skin darkening
    • Conjunctivitis
    • Post-op cystoid macular oedema
21
Q

what beta blockers are used for glaucoma

A
  • Non-selective and cardio selective available
  • Timolol
  • Reduce aqueous production
  • BD or OD (if OD mane best)
22
Q

s/e of beta blockers used for glaucoma

A
  • Breathlessness
    • Bradycardia
    • Tiredness
    • Depression
    • Erectile dysfunction
    • Hypotension
    • Angina
23
Q

how are carbonic anhydrase inhibitors used for glaucoma

A
  • Reduced perfusion of aqueous
  • Least potent - TDS
  • C/I in sulfonamide sensitivity
  • Brinzolamide and dorzolamide
24
Q

which 3 alpha agonists are used in glaucoma

A
  • brimonidine
    • High allergy rate
    • Taste perversion
    • CNS s/e - nightmares
  • Apraclonidine
    • Short term - pre surgery
  • Avoid MAOIs or TCAs