Title: COMMON EYE PROBLEMS: THE RED EYE
1COMMON EYE PROBLEMSTHE RED EYE
- William A. Curry, MD
- GIM Noon Conference
- March 27, 2007
2Goals for this talk
- What are some acute or subacute eye conditions
internists are likely to encounter? - Which ones need referral right away?
- What should we do for the rest?
3CASE ONE
- 27 yo WM prisoner brought by police from jail for
headache - Pain in right eye and right side of head and face
- One week, progressive pain now intense
- Moderately injected conjunctiva, cloudy cornea
- Can see only finger-counting
- Neuro exam otherwise normal
4CASE ONE
5CASE ONE
- Referred emergently
- DX Acute narrow angle glaucoma, intraocular
pressure very high - Controlled with midriatic and Beta blocker eye
drops - No improvement in vision
- TEACHING POINTS
- Acute glaucoma can be confused with various
headache syndromes. - Recognizing true source of pain prevents
unnecessary delay of extended neuro eval. - Early intervention is crucial to preserve vision.
6WHAT SYMPTOMS REQUIRE IMMEDIATE REFERRAL of RED
EYE?
- Unilateral red eye with N/V
- Severe ocular pain
- Loss of visual acuity
7WHAT CONDITIONS REQUIRE IMMEDIATE REFERRAL OF
RED EYE?
- Keratitis (infection of cornea)
- Hyphema (blood in anterior chamber)
- Hypopyon (pus in anterior chamber)
- Acute glaucoma
- Penetrating trauma
8(No Transcript)
9IMMEDIATE REFERRAL
Keratitis (herpes)
Keratitis (aspergillus)
Keratitis (fusarium)
10IMMEDIATE REFERRAL
Hyphema (blood in ant. chamber)
Hypopyon (pus in ant. chamber)
11IMMEDIATE REFERRAL
Penetrating trauma
12EXAMINATION OF THE RED EYE
- General Observation
- Measurement of Visual Acuity
- Penlight Examination
- Funduscopic Examination
13General Observation of Red Eye
- Foreign Body sensation/photophobia?
- YES Worry about keratitis, uveitis/iritis, angle
closure glaucoma - Associated Rheumatic d/o or IBD?
- YES Worry about scleritis, episcleritis
- Allergic or URI symptoms?
- YES Viral or allergic conjunctivitis likely
14Visual Acuity of the Red Eye
- Formal Snellen chart at 20 ft. not necessary
looking for gross changes. - Can patient read what ordinarily he/she could
easily see? - Use hand-held acuity chart or reading material.
15Penlight Exam of Red Eye
- Reaction to light?
- Mid-dilation and fixed
- angle closure glaucoma
- 1-2 mm, pinpoint corneal abrasion,
keratitis, iritis - Purulent discharge?
- Corneal opacity bacterial keratitis
- No corneal opacity
- bacterial conjunctivitis
16Penlight Exam of Red Eye
- Pattern of Redness?
- Diffuse (bulbar and palpebral conjuntivae)
conjunctivitis of any cause. - Ciliary flush more injected at limbus
(junction of sclera and cornea) in keratitis,
iritis, angle closure. - Corneal white spot, opacity, or foreign body?
- Yes Keratitis or foreign body
17RED FLAG FOR RED EYES CILIARY FLUSH (at limbus)
- SCLERITIS
- Painful, potentially blinding
- 50 assoc. w/systemic
- illness (RA, Wegeners)
- Need topical steroids by ophthalmologist
- EPISCLERITIS
- Abrupt onset, watery irritation
- Does not threaten vision
- Ophthalmology to r/o scleritis
- Assoc. w/RA, IBD, vasculitides,
- zoster, Lyme
18Penlight Exam of Red Eye
- Does a corneal defect take up fluorescein?
- YES keratitis, corneal abraision
- NO foreign body
- Blood (hyphema) or pus (hypopyon) in
anterior chamber? - Hyphema blunt or penetrating
trauma - Hypopyon infectious keratitis,
endophthalmitis, Behcets
19FUNDUSCOPIC EXAM IN RED EYE
20RED EYE NOT NEEDING REFERRAL
- Vision not affected
- Pupil reacts to light
- No foreign body sensation/photophobia
- No corneal opacity
- No hypopyon or hyphema
21CONJUNCTIVITIS
- INFECTIOUS
- Bacterial
- Viral
- NON-INFECTIOUS
- Allergic
- Non-allergic
22BACTERIAL CONJUNCTIVITIS
- Adults Staph. Aureus
- Children S. pneum., H. flu,
- Moraxella
- Highly contagious
- Purulent discharge often awakening
- with eye stuck shut (matted up), /- bilat.
- Usually self-limited, Rx helpful (Grandmas warm
compress, erythro, sulfa, or quinolone drops or
ointment) - EXCEPTION Hyperacute variant from GC
requires hospitalization b/o risk of keratitis
and perforation (GNC on Gm stain) - Quinolone (ciprofloxacin) drops for contact
lens-associated infection (often Pseudomonas)
23VIRAL CONJUNCTIVITIS
- Usually adenoviral
- Associated w/viral synd. or isolated
- Highly contagious
- Injection, watery or mucoserous d/c
- Pt. c/o unilateral burning, gritty/sandy
sensation, perhaps crusting overnight - Inside lower lid may be bumpy looking
- Self-limited, 5 days to 3 wks.
- Topical antihistamines help sx
- EXCEPTION EKC (epidemic keratoconjunctivitis)
w/fb sensation, resist opening eyes need urgent
referral to avoid vision loss
24ALLERGIC CONJUNCTIVITIS
- Bilat. conj. Injection, watery d/c, itchy
- Typically a hx of allergy
- Looks a lot like viral
- conjunctivitis
- May have chemosis
- (conj. edema), worst in patients allergic to
cats
25Treatment of Allergic Rhinitis
adapted from UpToDate
26NON-ALLERGIC, NON-INFECTIOUS CONJUNCTIVITIS
- Typical patients
- Sjogrens
- Idiopathic dry eyes
- Post-trauma
- S/P foreign body
- Symptomatic Rx
- Drops Hypotears, Refresh, Tears II, generic
artificial tears/methyl cellulose - Ointment Lacrilube, Refresh PM, generic
27CORNEAL ABRAISION
HISTORY OF TRAUMA (none typically with keratitis)
Penlight exam shows linear defect.
Fluorescein avidly stains basement membrane.
Staining confirms linear corneal damage.
28SUBCONJUNCTIVAL HEMORRHAGE
History Usually spontaeous, on awakening.
Penlight Exam Limbus is spared, unlike
scleritis/episcleritis. Treatment None
necessary (or possible).
29CONTACT LENS OVERUSE
- MUST exclude corneal
- infiltrate (spots)
- If absent, can Rx
- anti-Pseudomonal
- drops or ointment (ofloxacin, ciprofloxacin,
tobramycin) - (NOT sulfa or erythro) DO NOT PATCH.
- Recheck in 24 hrs or less.
- Corneal infiltrate can be devastating and
requires emergent referral.
30EYELID LESIONS
- BLEPHARITIS
- CHALAZION
- HORDEOLUM (stye)
Rx Grandmas warm compress, baby shampooRx
seborrhea or rosacea if present
Inflammatory, can result in chalazion or stye.
Chronic inflammatory lesion of tear glandRx
soaks, NO antibioticsRefer if persists more than
a few weeksCan be confused w/carcinomas
Purulent inflammation of lid, sterile or
bacterial (usually Staph. spp.)Rx Grandmas
warm compress, antibiotic if there is
cellulitis.Refer if not resolved in 1 -2 weeks
Internal
External
31WHAT SYMPTOMS REQUIRE IMMEDIATE REFERRAL of RED
EYE?
- Unilateral red eye with N/V
- Severe ocular pain
- Loss of visual acuity
32WHAT CONDITIONS REQUIRE IMMEDIATE REFERRAL OF
RED EYE?
- Keratitis (infection of cornea)
- Hyphema (blood in anterior chamber)
- Hypopyon (pus in anterior chamber)
- Acute glaucoma
- Penetrating trauma
33Thank you for watching.