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Ocular emergency

Ocular emergency. Ocular emergency. True emergency Chemical burn Central retinal artery occlusion Rx should be instituted within minutes. Urgent situations Acute narrow angle glaucoma Endophthalmitis Penetrating injury of the globe

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Ocular emergency

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  1. Ocular emergency

  2. Ocular emergency • True emergency • Chemical burn • Central retinal artery occlusion • Rx should be instituted withinminutes

  3. Urgent situations • Acute narrow angle glaucoma • Endophthalmitis • Penetrating injury of the globe • Orbital cellulitis , Preseptalcellulitis in children • Cavernous sinus thrombosis • Corneal ulcer • Gonococcal conjunctivitis • Giant cell arteritis with acute ischemic of optic nerve • Acute retinal detachment • Hyphema • Rx should be instituted within one to several hours

  4. Semi-urgent situations • Optic neuritis • Ocular tumors • Acute exophthalmos • Old retinal detachment (involve macular >1 wk) • Strabismus in young children • Blow-out fracture of the orbit • Rx should be instituted withindays

  5. CRAO • Unilateral, sudden, painless loss of vision • VA: FC (counting finger) to PL (light perception) in about 90% of cases • better vision in cases of cilio-retinal artery sparing (~ 15%)

  6. NPL (no light perception) in cases of ophthalmic artery occlusion

  7. Fundus finding • Cherry-red spot appearance • opaque or whitened and edematous retina, particularly in the posterior pole due to retinal ischemia

  8. Causes • Emboli or thrombosis (mostly) • Connective tissue diseases -Giant cell arteritis - SLE - Rheumatoid arthritis • Others

  9. Management • Treat without delay, before work up • irreversible damage within about 90 minutes of complete occlusion • Reduce intraocular pressure (IOP) - ocular massage - anterior chamber paracentesis - antiglaucoma drugs • Inhalation therapy: carbogen (mixture of 95% oxygen and 5% carbon dioxide)

  10. Prognosis • Permanent severe loss of vision from retinal infarction despite reopening or recanalization of the central retinal artery • Irreversible damage within about 90 minutes of complete occlusion

  11. Prognosis • Questionable efficacy of treatments • Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in patients with CRAO!!

  12. Chemical burn • The severity depends on • the volume and duration of contact • the pH • the inherent toxicity of the chemical

  13. Alkali • Alkalis cause saponification of fatty acids in cell membranes and ultimately cellular disruption • lye (NaOH) • caustic potash (KOH) • fresh lime [Ca(OH)2]: plaster, cement • ammonia (NH3): househole cleaner, fertilizer, refrigerant

  14. Acid • Acids denature and precipitate proteins in tissues they contact • battery acid (H2SO4) • bleach • fruit & vegetable preservatives • industrial solvents

  15. Degree • Corneal haziness • Perilimbal blanching • Cells in anterior chamber

  16. Mild degree • Erosion of corneal epithelium • Faint haziness of cornea • No ischemic necrosis of perilimbal conjunctiva and sclera (no blanching)

  17. Moderate degree • Markedly hyperemic eye • Corneal opacity with blurring of iris detail • Corneal edema • Slight limbal ischemia (partial blanching) • Anterior uveitis

  18. Severe degree • Marked corneal opacity with blurring of the pupillary outline • Marked corneal edema • Marked limbal ischemia (total blanching) • Whitening of the external eye • Severe uveitis

  19. Ocular adnexa

  20. Long term complications • Superficial neovascularization of the cornea • Persistent epithelial defect • Corneal thinning and perforation • Permanent visual impairment from corneal scar • Corneal transplantation

  21. PKP (corneal transplantation)

  22. Management • Immediate and copious irrigation • relief pain: topical anesthetic agent • at least 1,000-2,000 cc of NSS , test pH • avoid direct pressure if rupture suspected • remove any foreign bodies • careful examination after irrigation for other ocular injuries

  23. Management • Decreasing inflammation • Topical steroid • Monitoring IOP • Antiglaucoma drugs • Limiting matrix degradation • Ascorbate, collagenase inhibitor • Promoting reepithelialization • Tear (non-preservatives) • Prophylaxis topical antibiotic

  24. Acute glaucoma • Acute attack or acute angle-closure glaucoma • Unilateral, sudden, painful loss of vision • Risk factors: - elderly age, female>male - small, hyperopic eye - familial risk - previous attack of the fellow eye - dark environment

  25. Sign & symptom • Aching pain, +/- nausea & vomiting • Decrease vision +/- halos due to corneal edema • Red eye (conjunctival congestion maybe ciliary injection or mixed injection) • Very tense eyeball (IOP often > 40-50 mmHg) • Sami dilated fixed pupil • Narrow angle in both eyes

  26. Management • Rapidly lower high IOP by hyperosmotic agents(oral acetazolamide, 50%glycerine or 20%mannitol) • Other anti-glaucoma drugs: - b adrenergic antagonist - parasymmatomimetic agent - carbonic anhydrase inhibitor (CAI) - selective a 2 adrenergic agonist - prostaglandin analog

  27. Management • Treatment of choice: peripheral iridectomy; PI, (laser or surgical PI) for both eyes • indicated when the cornea is clear enough

  28. Other surgical treatments: • filtering surgery • tube implant surgery

  29. Orbital cellulitis • Clinical appearance • eyelid edema and erythema • proptosis, chemosis , pain on eye movement , external ophthalmoplegia, decreased vision , RAPD + • malaise , headache , fever

  30. Orbital cellulitis • Causes • Periorbital structures • most commonly from the paranasal sinuses • the face, the globe, and the lacrimal sac • Trauma or surgery • Hematogenous spread from bacteremia

  31. Orbit: Infection • (Preseptalcellulitis) • Orbital cellulitis • Subperiosteal abscess • Orbital abscess • Cavernous sinus thrombosis

  32. Management • Vision loss due to high orbital pressure : lateral cantholysis, rarely in very severe case, orbital decompression • Systemic ATB : 10-14 days, longer in severe case • Treat causes

  33. Complication and sequelae • Corneal exposure with secondary ulcerative keratitis • Facial cellulitis, necrotizing fasciitis • Brain abscess, meningitis, osteomyelitis • Panophtalmitis • Sepsis

  34. Endophthalmitis • Postoperative, posttraumatic, endogenous • Painful visual loss • Ciliary injection, chemosis, corneal edema, and eyelids edema • Cells in A/C, vitreous

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