Eyes Examination Flashcards

1
Q

What cranial nerves are involved with the eyes?

A

optic (I) nerve
oculomotor (III) nerve
trochlear (IV) nerve
abducen (VI) nerve.

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2
Q

What you look for when inspecting the pupils?

A

Size
Shape
Symmetry

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3
Q

Visual acuity:

When should the previous line be recorded as the result while using the Snellen chart?

A

If they get more than 2 on that line wrong

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4
Q

Visual acuity:

What does improvement using a pinhole suggest?

What needs to be worn before using a snellen chart?

A

There is a refractive element to their poor vision

Glasses or visual aids and this needs to be recorded.

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5
Q

Visual acuity:

What if patient is unable to read the top line at 6 metres even with pinhole? - THERE ARE 5 STEPS

A

Reduce to 3 metres from snellen chart - acuity then recorded as 3/denominator.

THEN 1 metre - 1/denominator

Finger counting - how many fingers am i holding up

Gross hand movements - wave hand in front of face

Use pen torch to see if they can detect light

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6
Q

Where is the lesion if there is:

Total blindness in one eye

Bipolar hemianopia

Right nasal hemianopia

Homonymous hemianopia - 2

Homonymous inferior quadrantanopia

Homonymous superior quadrantanopia

A

Optic nerve

Midline of optic chiasm

Perichiasmal area

Optic tract
Occipital lobe

Lower optic radiations

Upper optic radiations

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7
Q

What do you look at on inspection?

A
Pupils 
Eyelids - ptosis 
Conjugate gaze - both eyes looking in same direction 
Nystagmus 
Double vision
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8
Q

Pupillary reflexes (afferent CN II, efferent CN III):

What suggests pathology?

Where could pathology be at?

A

Sluggish reaction
Lack of constriction

Optic nerve
Brainstem
Drugs

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9
Q

Pupillary reflexes (afferent CN II, efferent CN III):

What does a lack of normal consensual response suggest?

A

Damage to one or both optic nerves

Damage to the Edinger-Westphal nucleus

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10
Q

Pupillary reflexes (afferent CN II, efferent CN III):

What does the swinging light test test for?

A

Compares the function of the 2 optic nerves

Relative afferent pupillary defect (RAPD)

When the light is shone into the eye in which the optic nerve is functioning less well, it dilates.

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11
Q

What does the accommodation reflex assess?

A

Extraoccular muscle function

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12
Q

What does the H test assess

A

Eye movements and extra ocular muscle function

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13
Q

Fundoscopy:

How to assess the red reflex?

What does abscence mean>

A

Be about 30 cm from patients eyes

Cataracts
Neuroblastoma

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14
Q

Fundoscopy:

ROAM approach

A

Red reflex
Optic disc
Arcades
Macula

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15
Q

Fundoscopy:

What does a swollen optic disc mean?

A

Papilloedema - just say it looks swollen and it is a possible cause
Optic neuritis
Depositis

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16
Q

Fundoscopy:

What is the normal cup:disc ratio?

What is higher?

A

<0.5

Signs of glaucoma

17
Q

Fundoscopy:

What does blood in the disc indicate?

A

SAH

18
Q

Fundoscopy:

White stuff:

What do hard exudates indicate?

What do cotton wool spots indicate?

A

Yellow flecks of phospholipids due to raised cholesterol

Nerve fibre ischaemia from DM, HTN, HIV and anaemia

19
Q

Fundoscopy:

Red stuff:

What are (pre-retinal) vitreous haemorrhages?

What is a specific feature about the edge of a flame haemorrhages? With health problem is it seen?

A

Leakage of blood in to the vitreous humour of the eye

DM
SAH
HTN

Have feathery edges

HTN

20
Q

Fundoscopy:

Red stuff:

Blots are medium sized - what causes them? - 2 - starts with d and h

Dots are micro aneurysms - what is the only thing that can cause this? - starts with d

A

DM
HTN

DM

21
Q

Diabetic Neuropathy:

3 things that DM does to the retina?

A

Hard exudates
Cotton-wool spots
Blots and dot haemorrhages

22
Q

Severe hypertension signs? - 4

A

Cotton wool spots
Papillooedema
Blot and flame haemorrhages
Macular star