Exam Flashcards

1
Q

Bacterial conjunctivitis treatment

A

Chloramphenicol qds

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2
Q

Chloramphenicol should be avoided when..

A

allergy

risk of aplastic anaemia

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3
Q

Treatment of bacterial keratitis

A

Admission- cefuroxime and gentamicin

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4
Q

Complication of herpetic keratitis

A

Dendritic ulcer

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5
Q

Consequence of treating herpetic keratitis with steroids

A

Corneal melt

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6
Q

Sources of endopthalmitis

A

Endogenous (staph epidermidis)

Iatrogenic (e.g. from steroid injections, VEGF)

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7
Q

Three layers of the meninges

A

Dura mater
Arachoid mater
(Subarachnoid space)
Pia mater

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8
Q

CSF is produced in…

A

Choroid plexus of the ventricles

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9
Q

Cerebral aqueduct connects…

A

The 3rd and fourth ventricles

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10
Q

“Copper wiring” appearance

A

Retinal vessels in hypertensive retinopathy

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11
Q

Associations of uveitis

A

juvenile arthritis
sarcoidosis
ank spond
Crohn’s and ulcerative coliti

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12
Q

Amaurosis fugax

A

Transient painless visual loss

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13
Q

Occlusion of which arteries leads to iscahemic optic neuropathy

A

Posterior ciliary arteries

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14
Q

Symptoms and signs of vitreous haemorrhage

A

Floaters, loss of vision, loss of red reflex

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15
Q

Symptoms and signs of retinal detachment

A

Flashes and floaters
Painless loss of vision “like a curtain coming down”
Relative afferent pupillary defect

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16
Q

Signs of open angle glaucoma

A

Optic disc cupping
Increased intra ocular pressure
Visual field defect

17
Q

“Drusen” on fundoscopy and loss of the central portion of vision

A

Age related macular degeneration

18
Q

Management of acute angle closure glaucoma

A

Pilocarpine- constrict the pupil
Diuretics
Ocular steroids

19
Q

Mechanism of action of chloramphenicol

A

Peptidyl transferase inhibitor

20
Q

Carbonic anydrase inhibitors in glaucoma

A

Systemically promote diuresis, decrease humour secretion in the ey

21
Q

Increase uveoscleral outflow in glaucoma

A

Prostaglandin analogues e.g. latanoprost

22
Q

6th nerve plasy + papilloedema

A

Raised ICP compressing abducent nerve

23
Q

Head tilt in a child

A

Congenital 4th nerve palsy

24
Q

Ptosis, dilated pupil, eye “down and out”

A

3rd nerve plasy

25
Q

Progressive visual loss, “deep” eye pain and colour desaturation

A

optic neuritis

26
Q

Congruous and macular-sparing field defects

A

Occipital cortex lesions