Eye Exam Flashcards

0
Q

Unilateral vision loss (non-painful): ddx?

Unilateral vision loss (painful): ddx?

A

Non-painful: vitreous humor hemorrhage, macular degeneration, retinal detachment, retinal vein occlusion, central retinal artery occlusion

Painful: (cornea or anterior chamber involvement)ulcer, uvetitis, traumatic hyphema, acute glaucoma

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1
Q

Define: presbyopia, hyperopia, and myopia

A

Presbyopia: aging vision, farsightedness
Hyperopia: farsightedness
Myopia: nearsightedness

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2
Q

Causes of diplopia (bilateral vs. unilateral)

A

Bilateral: brainstem or cerebellum lesion, weakness/paralysis of extraocular muscles

Unilateral: cornea or lens

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3
Q

Definition of “legally blind”

A

20/200

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4
Q

Causes of visual field defects

A

Anterior pathway (before optic chiasm): glaucoma, optic neuropathy, optic neuritis, glioma

Posterior pathway: stroke, chiasmal tumors

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5
Q

What can cause an enlarged blindspot?

A

glaucoma, optic neuritis, papilledema

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6
Q

What can cause Inward or outward deviation of the eyes?

A

Graves’ disease, ocular tumors

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7
Q

What can lateral sparseness in eyebrows mean? (ddx)

A

hypothyroidism

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8
Q

What can cause increased or decreased tearing?

A

Increased: (increased production)conjunctival inflammation, corneal irritation. (impaired drainage) ectropion-turning out of eyelid, nasal lacrimal duct obstrucion

Decreased:

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9
Q

Miosis vs. Myadriasis

A

Miosis: constriction of the pupils
Myadriasis: dilation

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10
Q

What can cause lid lag?

A

hyperthyroidism

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11
Q

What can cause poor convergence?

A

hyperthyroidism

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12
Q

What is the difference between an Afferent Pathway defect (CNII) vs. an Efferent Pathway (CNIII)?

A

CNII–> loss of direct pupillary reflex, with preservation of indirect pupillary reflex
CNIII–> complete paralysis of ipsilateral pupil

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13
Q

What is an Argyll Robertson pupil? Causes?

A

Lack of pupillary constriction with preservation of pupillary near accommodation

Causes: syphilis, diabetes, and lupus

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14
Q

What is Adie Tonic Pupil? Cause?

A

large pupil caused by damage to parasympathetic ciliary ganglion

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15
Q

Facial Motor lesions (UMN vs. LMN)

A

UMN: Contralateral paralysis of lower face, with forehead sparing
LMN: Ipsilateral paralysis of BOTH lower and upper face

16
Q

Uveitis

A

inflammation of the iris, ciliary body, and choroids
can be caused by auto-inflammatory disease or infection
blurry vision

17
Q

How is Internuclear Ophthalmoplegia distinguished from CN III palsy?

A

INO: preserves convergence. Most common in Multiple Sclerosis
CNIII: “Down and out”

18
Q

Marcus Gunn pupil

A

deficit in afferent light reflex (CN II, retinal detachment)–> affected pupil appears to dilate with light when switched from unaffected eye (but actually returning to baseline from constricted state)

19
Q

Xerophthalmia

A

Dry eyes

can be caused by Vit. A deficiency or Sjogren Syndrome

20
Q

Macular Degeneration

A

secondary to disruption of retina–> slow-onset of CENTRAL vision loss, w/ preservation of peripheral vision

21
Q

Amaurosis Fugax (sudden unilateral vision loss) (assoc. with what?)

A

embolization of ophthalmic artery

Assoc. with carotid bruit and atheroscleosis

22
Q

Glaucoma

A

due to increased ICP–> optic nerve atrophy

caused by decreased flow of aqueous humor through canal of Schlemm w/ or w/o narrowing of anterior chamber angle