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Common Eye Disorders Dina Mohammed Abdulmannan Umm Al-Qura university

Common Eye Disorders

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Common Eye Disorders. Dina Mohammed Abdulmannan Umm Al-Qura university. Chalazion. Chalazion. Inflammation of a meibomian gland Also called an internal hordeolum Usually requires no treatment, although if persistent may require surgical excision - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Common Eye Disorders

Common Eye Disorders

Dina Mohammed Abdulmannan

Umm Al-Qura university

Page 2: Common Eye Disorders

Chalazion

Page 3: Common Eye Disorders

Chalazion

• Inflammation of a meibomian gland

• Also called an internal hordeolum

• Usually requires no treatment, although if persistent may require surgical excision

• Hot compresses may be tried to help unblock meibomian gland

Page 4: Common Eye Disorders

Blepharitis

• A common, chronic, inflammatory condition of the eyelid margins

• Signs:– waxy, shiny lid margins– oily/debris in tear film– itchy, irritated eyes– most common cause of dry eye

Page 5: Common Eye Disorders

Blepharitis

• Treatment:– Eyelid hygiene is the mainstay of treatment. This

helps to remove crusts/scales and helps unplug blocked meibomian glands

– Warm compresses and eyelid massage – Natural tears give some relief, don’t cure problem– Occasionally AB’s for staphylococcal blepharitis

Page 6: Common Eye Disorders

Conjunctivitis

Page 7: Common Eye Disorders

Conjunctivitis

• Inflammation of the conjunctiva

• Signs:– redness– swelling– discharge– grittiness

Page 8: Common Eye Disorders

Conjunctivitis

• Often viral infection

• Treatment is dependant on the cause. May be:– viral – bacterial – allergic– follicular– others

Page 9: Common Eye Disorders

Abrasion

Page 10: Common Eye Disorders

Abrasion

Page 11: Common Eye Disorders

Corneal Abrasion

• Scraped area of corneal surface, accompanied by loss of epithelium.

• Abrasions of the epithelium heal within 72 hours and do not leave a scar. Deeper lesions, involving Bowman’s layer and below, heal with permanent opaque scarring.

Page 12: Common Eye Disorders

Corneal Abrasion

• Treatment may be with artificial tears for a minor abrasion or patching/bandage contact lens (BCL) application for more severe abrasions

Page 13: Common Eye Disorders

Keratoconus

Page 14: Common Eye Disorders

Keratoconus

• Degenerative corneal disease

• Characterized by generalized thinning and cone-shaped protusion of the central cornea

• Typically bilateral

• Usually diagnosed in the second decade

Page 15: Common Eye Disorders

Keratoconus

• Causes increase in myopia, astigmatism and surface irregularity

• In early stages, glasses or soft contact lenses may be used

• As disease progresses, need to use hard contacts to provide smooth refractive surface.

• Advanced cases may require penetrating keratoplasty

Page 16: Common Eye Disorders

Foreign Body

Page 17: Common Eye Disorders

Corneal Graft

Page 18: Common Eye Disorders

Corneal Graft(Penetrating Keratoplasty)

• Replacement of a scarred or diseased cornea with clear corneal tissue from a donor.

• Usually reserved for severe cases, where there is a good chance of vision improving after surgery

Page 19: Common Eye Disorders

Cataract

Page 20: Common Eye Disorders

Cortical Cataract

Page 21: Common Eye Disorders

Cataract

• Any lens opacity

• May be classified by age (congenital to senile), stage (early to hypermature), or type (NS, cort, PSC, etc)

• Some systemic diseases/conditions predispose to cataract (DM, RA, hypothyroid, smoking, corticosteroid use, etc)

Page 22: Common Eye Disorders

Cataract• Treatment:

– always the same regardless of what type or stage of cataract.

– CE with placement of either a AC or PC IOL. The power of the lens used is determined by the length of the eye (A-scan measurement)

– Phacoemulsification is used (US) to break up the cataract and remove it from the eye. Uses much smaller incision then removal of whole lens. Shorter healing time, less chance of infection, etc.

Page 23: Common Eye Disorders

ACIOL

Page 24: Common Eye Disorders

PCIOL

Page 25: Common Eye Disorders

PCO

Page 26: Common Eye Disorders

Post Cataract Surgery

• Posterior capsule opacification (PCO)– a membrane that forms behind the IOL causing

a decrease in vision.– may see Elschnig pearls on retroillumination– treatment is with a capsulotomy

Page 27: Common Eye Disorders

YAG Capsulotomy

Page 28: Common Eye Disorders

ON cupping

Page 29: Common Eye Disorders

Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma

Page 30: Common Eye Disorders

Glaucoma

• An optic neuropathy with characteristic optic nerve head changes

• Diagnosis is determined by ON evaluation, IOP measurements, and visual field findings.

Page 31: Common Eye Disorders

Glaucoma

• Normal findings:– ON: cup to disc ratio (c/d) of 0.4 or less– IOP: 10-21 mm Hg for average corneal

thickness– VF: full field (no paracentral scotomas, diffuse

depression, nasal steps or arcuate scotomas)

Page 32: Common Eye Disorders

Glaucoma

• Treatment:– topical or oral medication (many different

types)– laser surgery– incisional surgery

Page 33: Common Eye Disorders

Bleb

Page 34: Common Eye Disorders

Iritis

• Inflammation of the iris

• Signs:– red eye– pain– tearing– blurred vision– miosis (small pupil)

Page 35: Common Eye Disorders

Iritis

• Cause is unknown

• Iritis is graded at the slit lamp based on the presence of cells and flare in the AC

• Associated with systemic inflammatory conditions (RA, SLE, etc)

• Treatment is with dilating drops and topical steroids to reduce inflammation

• Often have recurrent flare-ups

Page 36: Common Eye Disorders

Anterior Uveitis

Page 37: Common Eye Disorders

Posterior Uveitis

Page 38: Common Eye Disorders

Uveitis

• Inflammation of the uvea (iris, ciliary body, choroid)

• Anterior uveitis (iridocyclitis) - iris or ciliary body

• Posterior uveitis - choroid

Page 39: Common Eye Disorders

Uveitis

• Signs:– photophobia– decreased vision– small pupil (meiosis)– red eye (usually most prominent at limbus)– normal IOP

Page 40: Common Eye Disorders

Uveitis

• Treatment is with topical steroids

• Steroids help to prevent secondary problems (cataract, uveitic glaucoma, adhesions of iris to lens)

• In severe cases, systemic steroids may be required

• Recurrence is common

Page 41: Common Eye Disorders

Posterior Vitreous Detachment (PVD)

• Separation of the vitreous gel from the retinal surface

• Tends to occur with aging as the vitreous liquifies

• May also occur in the presence of high myopia and diabetes

Page 42: Common Eye Disorders

Posterior Vitreous Detachment (PVD)

• No treatment is required in most cases

• Floaters tend to become less bothersome over time

• Treatment is required if there are retinal tears associated with the PVD which may lead to retinal detachment

Page 43: Common Eye Disorders

Diabetic Retinopathy

Page 44: Common Eye Disorders

Diabetic Retinopathy (DR)

• Spectrum of retinal changes that accompany long-standing diabetes mellitus

• Early stage is non-proliferative (dot and blot hemmorhages, hard exudates, microaneurysms)

• May advance to proliferative (neovascularization and fibrous tissue) if blood sugars not controlled

Page 45: Common Eye Disorders

Diabetic Retinopathy (DR)

• Treatment of proliferative disease is with panretinal laser photocoagulation (PRP)

• Concept of treatment is that areas that are scarred require less oxygen, therefore, this should promote regression of new blood vessels (neovascularization)

Page 46: Common Eye Disorders

Total Retinal Detachment

Page 47: Common Eye Disorders

Retinal Detachment (RD)

• Separation of sensory retina from underlying pigment epithelium

• May be caused by a retinal tear or by fibrous tissue traction

• Symptoms are flashing lights, streaks of lights, curtain coming across the eye, loss of vision

Page 48: Common Eye Disorders

Retinal Detachment (RD)

• Treatment is surgical and is usually done immediately

• A scleral buckle may be used in some cases

Page 49: Common Eye Disorders

Age-related Macular Degeneration

Page 50: Common Eye Disorders

ARMD

Page 51: Common Eye Disorders

Age-Related Macular Degeneration (ARMD/AMD)

• Deterioration of the macula resulting in loss of clear central vision

• Peripheral vision is maintained

• Two major types are dry and wet

• Dry - aging spots in the macula, exudate

• Wet - abnormal new blood vessels grow under the macula and leak blood and fluid

Page 52: Common Eye Disorders

Age-Related Macular Degeneration (ARMD/AMD)

• Treatment:– Dry: no treatment at present. Different types of

supplements have been tried but nothing has been proven to work

– Wet: Visudyne (dye and laser) is used to halt blood vessel growth and preserve vision

Page 53: Common Eye Disorders

Retinitis Pigmentosa

Page 54: Common Eye Disorders

Retinitis Pigmentosa

• Disease of the retina, often leading to functional blindness

• Usually presents by 20 years of age

• Characterized by night blindness and constriction of visual fields

• There is no treatment to cure this disease, only slow it’s progression

Page 55: Common Eye Disorders

Strabismus

Page 56: Common Eye Disorders

Strabismus

• Eye misalignment caused by extraocular muscle imbalance

• Deviation may be horizontal (eso or exo) or vertical (hypo or hyper)

• Tropia - present at all times

• Phoria - present only after fusion has been broken

Page 57: Common Eye Disorders

Strabismus

• Treatment is dependant on the cause of the eye turn

• Eyes may be straightened with patching, glasses, or surgery

• Visual maturity is reached at about 8 years of age

• Individuals with strabismus will never have fine stereoscopic vision