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Ophthalmology: The RED eye. Barbara Adams Shyni Nair. Aims. Know how to manage the red eye in general practice Know what, when and how to refer to secondary care Know what happens in the eye clinic. The Red Eye: taking a history. Questions to ask: One eye or both Time and speed of onset
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Ophthalmology: The RED eye Barbara Adams Shyni Nair
Aims • Know how to manage the red eye in general practice • Know what, when and how to refer to secondary care • Know what happens in the eye clinic
The Red Eye: taking a history Questions to ask: • One eye or both • Time and speed of onset • Pain, itchy or gritty, photophobia, VA- blurred/double vision etc, discharge, headaches, nausea, rashes • ? Trauma • Contact lens wearer • Associated URTI • Any other family members affected • Any treatment
The Red Eye: taking a history (2) • Past ocular history: similar episodes, wears glasses, recent eye test, any eye surgery, lazy eye, contact lens wear- ? Do they leave in at night/forget to clean lenses • Social history: ? Contact with children with sticky eye, e.g. Nursery. Elderly patient- ? Able to manage eye drops at home
Examining the Red Eye: useful tips • ? Visual acuity affected- use pinhole when assessing VA to remove refractive error • Ophthalmoscope is a good magnifier for looking at eye surface – adjust diopter • If taking a swab – don’t use fluorescein first (chlamydia test relies on fluorescence)
Examining the Red Eye (2) • Look at pattern of redness • Pupil- ? Reactive, shape • Cornea bright or cloudy • Look for foreign body • Magnifier- have good look at cornea, ? lumps on palpebral conjunctiva • Evert lid if FB suspected (wipe) • Feel for pre auricular lymph nodes • Fluorescein stain- shows any corneal injury (e.g. abrasion, FB, herpes) all unilateral • If using local anaesthetic ? pain relieved
Causes of red eye • Infection • Trauma • Allergy • Chemicals • Systemic illness
Classification of Red Eye Vision threatening • corneal infections; Scleritis; Hyphaema; Iritis/uveitis; Acute Glaucoma; orbital cellulitis Non vision threatening • subconjuctival haemmorhage; Hordeolum; Chalazion; Blepharitis; Conjunctivitis; Dry Eyes; Corneal abrasions
Symptoms associated with red eye (1) • Itching = allergy • Scratchy / burning = anything on front of the eye e.g. eyelids, conjunctiva, FB • Localised eyelid tenderness = Chalazion • Deep intense pain = usually serious • Corneal abrasions (exception) • scleritis • Iritis/uveitis • acute glaucoma (+vomiting) • non eye related e.g. sinusitis
Symptoms associated with red eye (2) • Photophobia = anything that damages surface of the eye • Corneal abrasions • Uveitis/Iritis • Acute Glaucoma (haloes around lights)
Conjunctivitis • Can be viral, bacterial, allergic, chlamydial • Gritty or itchy discomfort. If moderate to severe pain, suspect more serious pathology • Photophobia rare (and VA usually normal) unless severe form of adenoviral infection which may involve the cornea • Can be unilateral or bilateral • Discharge in infective conjunctivitis, follicles or papillae • May be eyelid swelling
Viral conjunctivitis • Watery • Unilateral then bilateral • Often with URTI and pre auricular nodes • May be trivial or severe • May need referral if painful • May last weeks • Sometimes epidemic • Viral is highly contagious and can cause keratitis (photophobia & haloes) refer
Bacterial conjunctivitis • Usually bilateral • Sticky in am • Not usually painful • Self limiting, lasts days • Treat with chloramphenicol or fucidin in children • In neonates- swab & refer (used to be notifiable disease). Slightly sticky vs. full blown conjunctivitis.
Allergic conjunctivitis • Itchy • Seasonal or perennial • Hayfever • Chronic severe types may need steroids esp in children/teenagers • Sensitised to drops or preservatives
Corneal causes of red eye • Abrasion • Trauma: e.g foreign body, more serious- blunt trauma, e.g champagne cork- need to refer urgently as risk of retinal detachment, orbital fracture, raised IOP and visuaL loss. May need urgent surgery • Corneal ulcer: contact lenses, herpetic • Other rare causes: Look for cloudy cornea; any corneal cause needs slit lamp examination to confirm
Herpetic • Herpes simplex usually corneal except as primary infection and commonly recurrent • Herpes Zoster causes immune mediated intraocular inflammation any time from two weeks after the initial infection - signs of uveitis - corneal denervation - raised intraocular pressure (IOP) common
Chemical injury • Ocular emergency • Alkali worse than acid • Irrigate (anything you can drink is suitable) but water is preferable, as much as possible. • LA prior • Send up to Eye clinic same day
Dry eyes • Caused by disturbance in the tear film. It may be the result of deficient aqueous production (eg, Sjogren syndrome, lacrimal gland dysfunction/obstruction) or increased evaporation (eg, contact lens use, allergies, Meibomian gland dysfunction, low blink rate) • Females • Autoimmune association (RA, Sjogren’s) • Burning, FB sensation, reflex tearing (confuses patients) • Rx artificial tears and lubricating ointment for nighttime • Schirmer test uses filter paper to wick up tears and measure the amount of production, as shown in a patient with Sjogren syndrome
Blepharitis: symptoms • Itching • Burning • Mild pain • FB sensation • Tearing or dry eyes • Crusting • Recurrent and variable
Blepharitis: causes • V common, no cure, aim is to manage symptoms • Anterior (eyelashes) & Posterior (meibomian glands) • Anterior: crusting of eyelid margin • Posterior: inflammation of meibomian glands, usually more symptomatic (itching/irritation/FB sensation) • Often assoc with systemic disease, e.g. rosacea or seborrhoeic dermatitis • Treatment: lid hygiene, lubricant eye drops, systemic antibiotics for refractory cases. (e.g. doxycycline- 100mg od 1m then 50mg od 2m)
Styes and chalazions • A stye (hordeolum) is an acute, localised abscess of the eyelid caused by staphylococcal infection Two types • External stye (external hordeolum or common stye): edge of eyelid. Caused by infection of eyelash follicle or gland (sebaceous- Zeiss or apocrine- Moll) • Internal stye (internal hordeolum or meibomian stye) occurs on conjunctival surface of the eyelid and caused by infection of a meibomian gland (within tarsal plate)
Styes and Chalazions (2) • Chalazions are lipogranulomas of either a meibomian or Zeiss gland. Lipid breakdown products leak into surrounding tissues from either bacterial enzymes or retained sebaceous secretions and cause a granulomatous inflammatory reaction. They are non tender nodules deep within the lid or tarsal plate • Treated conservatively with lid massage and moist heat to express secretions • Surgical incision and curettage performed for large symptomatic chalazions (need exceptions panel) ? Biopsy for recurrent lesions to r/o sebaceous cell carcinoma
Uveitis • Usually unilateral or asymmetric • Painful (worse on accomodation), unrelieved by local • Circumcorneal injection • Recurrent • May be systemic associations • HLA B27, sarcoid etc • Needs secondary care referral • Only indication in primary care for steroids before slit lamp exam- if recurrent (usually have ROC card and have direct access to eye clinic)
Episcleritis • Sectorial or diffuse • Usually asymptomatic other than redness • Self limiting
Scleritis • Immune mediated- complex deposition • Needs systemic investigation and treatment • Painful and usually bilateral • Try NSAIDs, then steroids, then others
Subconjunctival haemorrhage • May be spontaneous or traumatic, e.g. Prolonged coughing, childbirth • Blood under conjunctiva, normal VA • Refer if traumatic, otherwise check BP in elderly patients (hypertension) • Reassure, resolves within few weeks
Acute glaucoma • Age 60-80s, in wwinter • Degree of pain • Fixed pupil, mid dilated • Variable injection
Before treating any red eye: • Exclude foreign body • Exclude corneal problem • Exclude uveitis, scleritis, acute glaucoma • History, degree of pain, lack of discharge, laterality, examination • NO OTHER PROBLEM WOULD SUFFER FROM A COURSE OF ANTIBIOTIC DROPS