Title: Drug Induced Eye Conditions
1Drug Induced Eye Conditions
- Erin Lichtenstein
- September 2009
2Drugs effecting the cornea
- Vortex keratopathy
- Although deposits may involve the visual axis,
vision is not impaired. Patients may notice
haloes around lights. - Causes Chloroquine and hydroxycholorquine,
Amiodarone - Whorl like corneal deposits, also called cornea
verticillata - Signs in order of occurrence
- Bilateral, fine grayish or golden-brown opacities
in the inferior corneal epithelium - Arborizing horizontal lines
- A whorl-like pattern which originates from below
the pupil and swirls outwards, sparing the limbus
3Vortex keratopathy, con.
- Meperidine, Indomethacin, and Tamoxifen.
- Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine
- Unlike retinopathy, keratopathy bears no
relationship to dosage or duration of treatment - Changes are usually reversible on cessation of
therapy - Amiodarone
- Almost all patients develop keratopathy
- Extent is related to dose and duration
- Resolves on cessation of therapy
- Other toxic effects anterior subcapsular
cataracts and optic neuropathy
4More drugs effecting the cornea
- Chlorpromazine
- Used as a sedative and to treat psychotic
illnesses - Patients on long-term therapy may develop
diffuse, yellow-brown granular deposits in the
endothelium and the deep stroma - Other effects include anterior subcapsular lens
deposits and retinopathy
5More drugs effecting the cornea
- Gold Used in the treatment of rheumatoid
arthritis - Characterized by dust-like, glittering granules
throughout the corneal stroma - Do not effect vision
6Drugs causing cataracts
- Steroids Both systemic and topical are
cataratogenic - Lens opacities are initially posterior
subcapsular and later the anterior subcapsular
region becomes affected. - Unknown dose and duration, however those on low
dose chronically may be immune - Children are more susceptible
7Drugs causing cataracts
- Chlorpromazine
- Causes the deposition of innocuous, fine,
stellate, yellow-brown deposits on the anterior
lens capsule - Usually not visually significant
- Allopurinol
- Increases the risk of cataract formation if the
cumulative dose exceeds 400g or duration exceeds
3 years
8Drugs causing uveitis
- Rifabutin Used to treat Tuberculosis and MAC
complex, typically presents with a unilateral
acute uveitis, often with a hypopyon. - Treatment is stopping the medication
- Cidovir Used in the management of CMV retinitis,
causes acute anterior uveitis and vitritis. - Treatment is with topical steroids and mydriatics
9Drugs causing retinopathy
- Chloroquine and hydroxychlorquine
- The former now rarely used for malaria treatment
and prophylaxis, the latter is often used for
rheumatologic conditions like SLE, rheumatoid
arthritis, juvenile arthritis - The latter is much safer than the former, and if
the daily dose is less than 400mg, the risk of
retinopathy is rare - Risk is increased if daily does is 6.5 mg/kg for
longer than 5 years - Screening should be annual after having been on
the medication for 5 years, although it often
starts before this time - Screening includes a thorough fundoscopic exam
and a 10-2 AVF (detects the earliest changes) - Recent studies suggest the a multifocal ERG may
be the most effective way of screening early
toxicity
10Stages of Chloroquine/Hydroxychloroquine
Retinopathy
- Pre-maculopathy
- Normal visual acuity, a small scotoma location
between 4 to 9 degrees from fixation - If drug stopped, vision usually returns to normal
- Early maculopathy
- Modest reduction in visual acuity to around 20/30
or 20/40 - Fundus exam shows subtle bulls eye macular
lesion, which may be more obvious on FA because
the RPE atrophy gives rise to a window defect - Moderate maculopathy
- Vision further reduced to around 20/60 or 20/80
and the bulls eye lesion is much more obvious on
exam - Severe maculopathy
- Marked reduction in vision to 20/100, 20/200 and
there is widespread RPE atrophy in the macula - End-stage maculopathy
- Severe reduction in vision and marked atrophy of
the RPE with unmasking of the larger choroidal
vessels - Retinal arteries may become attenuated and
pigment clumping may develop in the peripheral
retina
11Stages of Chloroquine/Hydroxychloroquine
Retinopathy
12Drugs causing retinopathy
- Phenothiazines (Thioridazine and
Chlorporomazine) - Used to treat schizophrenia
- Doses which exceed 800mg/day for a few weeks is
sufficient to reduce vision and impair dark
adaptation
13Phenothiazines, con.
- Clinical signs of progressive retinotoxicity in
order are - Salt and pepper pigmentary changes of the
mid-periphery and posterior pole - Pigment clumping and focal loss of the RPE
- Diffuse loss of the RPE and choriocapillaris
14Drugs causing crystalline maculopathy
- Tamoxifen
- Estrogen antagonist-agonist used to treat Breast
CA - Rarely can cause superficial, crystalline
deposits in macula - Visual acuity decreases are usually secondary to
foveal cyst development - Canthaxanthin
- An oral tanning agent
- Maculopathy reverses once drug is stopped
- Nitrofurantoin
- An antibiotic used in the treatment of UTI
- Long term use can lead to deposition in the
superficial and deep retinal layers throughout
the posterior pole
15Drugs causing maculopathy
- Interferon alpha
- Used to treat various conditions including
Hepatitis C, cutaneous melanomas - Causes a retinopathy similar in appearance to
radiation retinopathy with cotton wool spots and
intraretinal hemorrhages.
16Drugs causing maculopathy, con.
- Niacin
- Used to treat high cholesterol
- A small percentage of patients develop a
maculopathy that appears like cystoid macular
edema on exam and on OCT but does not leak on FA - Resolves (see below) when Niacin stopped.
17Drugs causing optic neuropathy
- Ethambutol
- Used in combination with isoniazid and rifampin
in the treatment of Tb. - Toxicity typically occurs between 3 and 6 months
of starting treatment - VF defects usually consist of central or
centrocecal scotomas - Prognosis is usually good upon cessation of the
medication but a minority of patients develop
permanent visual impairment - Amiodarone
- Antiarrhythmic drug used to treat atrial
fibrillation and ventricular tachycardia - Optic neuropathy only affects 1-2 of patients
and is not dose related. - Prognosis is guarded because cessation of the
drug may not restore vision
18Drugs causing optic neuropathy, con.
- Vigabatrin
- An antiepileptic drug which causes nonprogressive
bilateral binasal visual field defects. - The defects persist once treatment is stopped but
do not progress with treatment - Viagra
- Controversial association with nonarteritic
ischemic optic neuropathy - 14 anecdotal case reports have reported, but may
be coincidental - Definitely does cause blue tinged vision which
resolves
19Randoms
- Flomax
- An alpha-1 antagonist used to treat the urinary
symptoms of BPH - Makes cataract extraction difficult
- Causes the Floppy Iris Syndrome Symptoms
include iris billowing and floppiness, iris
prolapse to the main and side incisions, and
progressive constriction to the pupil during
surgery - Topamax
- An anti-epileptic drug now more frequently used
to treat migraine headaches - Can cause a uveal effusion syndrome, with
swelling of the ciliary body leading to pupillary
block and angle closure. - A myopic shift can also be seen.
- Occurs most often within 2 weeks of instituting
treatment.
20References (material and all photos)
- Carter, John. Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy
and stroke with use of PDE-5 inhibitors for
erectile dysfunction Cause or coincidence?
Journal of the Neurologic Sciences. Vol 262 15
November 2007, Pages 89-97. - Hamilton, Richard and Weinberg, David. Retinal
Toxicity of Systemically Administered Drugs,
Yanoff and Duker Ophthalmology, 3rd Edition.
Mosby, New York, 2008. - Kanski, Jack. Clinical Ophthalmology, 6th
Edition. Elsevier, London, 2007.