The red eye Flashcards

1
Q

What is blepharitis?

A
  • inflamed eyelids

- can be anterior or posterior

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2
Q

What is anterior blepharitis? how does this affect the conjunctiva? what else can this involve?

A

• Inflammation of the lid margin is concentrated in the lash line can accompanied by squamous debris around the eyelashes
• Conjunctiva becomes injected
• In severe disease cornea is affected
(Blepharokeratitis)
• Small infiltrates or ulcers may form in the peripheral cornea
(marginal keratitis)

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3
Q

What causes anterior blepharitis?

A

Seborrhoeic (squamous) scales on the lashes
Staphylococcal – infection involving the lash follicle
Lid margin redder than deeper part of lid

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4
Q

What are the clinical signs seen in seberrhoeic blepharitis?

A

Lid margin red
Scales ++
Dandruff+
(No ulceration, lashes unaffected)

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5
Q

What are the clinical signs seen in staphylococcal blepharitis?

A
  • lid margin red
  • Lashes distorted, loss of lashes, ingrowing lashes - trichiasis
  • Styes, ulcers of lid margin
  • corneal staining, marginal ulcers (due to exotoxin)
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6
Q

What is posterior blepharitis ? what is it also known as?

A

• This is also known as meibomian gland dysfunction

Meibomian glands are usually obstructed by squamous debris

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7
Q

How is posterior blepharitis different from anterior blepharitis?

A

redness is in deeper part of lid

lid margin often quite normal looking

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8
Q

What are the signs seen in posterior blepharitis? what is this also assoc. with?

A
  • Lid margin skin and lashes unaffected
  • M.G. openings pouting & swollen
  • Inspissated (dried) secretion at gland openings
  • Meibomian Cysts (chalazia)

–Associated with Acne Rosacea (50%)

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9
Q

How is anterior and posterior blepharitis managed?

A

Lid hygiene – daily bathing / warm compresses

Supplementary tear drops

Oral doxycycline for 2-3 months

Very difficult to eradicate

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10
Q

What is anterior uveitis also known as?

A

iritis

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11
Q
What are the different:
-autoimmune
-infective
-malignant
-other
causes of anterior uveitis
A

Autoimmune:
-Reiter’s, ulcerative colitis, ankylosing spondylitis, sarcoidosis

Infective:
-T.B, syphilis, herpes simplex, herpes zoster

Malignancy:
-Leukaemia

Other:
-Idiopathic, traumatic, secondary to other eye disorders

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12
Q

What are the symptoms of anterior uveitis?

A
Pain (+ referred pain)
	Vision may be reduced
	Photophobia
	Red eye (circumcorneal)
nb often missed and treated as conjunctivitis
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13
Q

What are the signs seen in anterior uveitis

A
Ciliary injection (i.e. circum-corneal )
	Cells & flare in anterior chamber
	Keratic precipitates
	Hypopyon
	Synechiae – causes irregular pupil iris adheres to cornea or lens
	Small or irregular pupil
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14
Q

What is the treatment of anterior uveitis?

A

topical steroids
Pred Forte 1% Hourly tapering over 4-8 weeks
Mydriatics eg
Cyclopentolate 1% BD
investigate for systemic associations if recurrent or chronic

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15
Q

What is episcleritis? is this common? what is this assoc. with? What is the treatment?

A

inflamation of the episclera

  • Relatively common / no serious associations
  • Association with gout
  • Recurrent
  • Nodules may occur
  • Self limiting
  • Lubricants / topical NSAIDs / mild steroids
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16
Q

What is scleritis?
what is this assoc. with?
what symptoms/signs seen?
what is the treatment?

A
  • Association with serious systemic vasculitides e.g. Rh arthritis, Wegener’s
  • PAINFUL +
  • Injection of deep vascular plexus – ‘violaceous hue’
  • Phenylephrine test
  • Associated uveitis common

Treatment:

  • Oral NSAIDs
  • Oral Steroids
  • Steroid Sparing Agents
17
Q

Acute closed angle glaucoma:

  • what is this?
  • what are the clinical features?
A
  • IOP rises acutely due to the drainage angle being closed (pupil dilatation precipitates it)
  • Elderly* hypermetropic – thick glasses
  • Severe pain + nausea
  • Circumcorneal injection
  • Cornea cloudy (oedematous)
  • Pupil mid dilated
  • Eye stony hard
18
Q

How does subacute closed angle glaucoma present?

A

Subacute closed angle presents with intermittent attacks typically lasting 1-2 hours and are associated with blurring of vision and haloes around light sources