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The Red Eye Introduction • Relevance – Red Eye • Frequent presentation to GP • Must be able to differentiate between serious vision threatening conditions and simple benign conditions Differential diagnosis of red eye • Conjunctival – – – – – – – – – • Lid diseases – – – • Clalazion Sty Abnormal lid function Corneal disease – – • • Blepharoconjunctivitis Bacterial conjunctivitis Viral conjunctivitis Chlamydial conjunctivitis Allergic conjunctivitis Toxic/chemical reaction Dry eye Pinguecula/pteyrgium Subconjunctival hemorrhage Abrasion Ulcer Foreign body Trauma • • • • • • • • Dacryoadenitis Dacryocystitis Masquerade syndrome Carotid and dural fistula Acute angle glaucoma Anterior uveitis Episcleritis/scleritis Factitious Blepharitis • • • • • Adults > children Inflammation of the lid margin Frequently associated with styes Meibomian gland dysfunction Lid hygiene, topical antibiotics, and lubricants are the mainstays of treatment Bacterial Conjunctivitis • Both adults and children • Tearing, foreign body sensation, burning, stinging and photophobia • Mucopurulent or purulent discharge • Lid and conjunctiva maybe edematous • Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and staphylococcus aureus and epidermidis • Conjunctival swab for culture • Topical broad spectrum antibiotics Viral Conjunctivitis – Acute, watery red eye with soreness, foreign body sensation and photophobia – Conjunctiva is often intensely hyperaemic and there maybe follicles, haemorrhages, inflammatory membranes and a preauricular node – The most common cause is an adenoviral infection – No specific therapy but cold compresses are helpful 9 Allergic Conjunctivitis – Encompasses a spectrum of clinical condition – All associated with the hallmark symptom of itching – There is often a history of rhinitis, asthma and family history of atopy – Signs may include mildly red eyes, watery discharge, chemosis, papillary hypertrophy and giant papillae – Treatment consist of cold compresses, antihistamines, nonsteroidals, mast cells stabilizers, topical corticosteroids and cyclosporine 11 Chlamydial Conjunctivitis – Usually occur in sexually active individuals with or without an associated genital infection – Conjunctivitis usually unilateral with tearing, foreign body sensation, lid crusting, conjunctival discharge and follicles – There is often non-tender preauricular node – Treatments requires oral tetracycline or azithromycin Conjunctivitis Follicles Papillae Redness Chemosis Purulent discharge Subconjunctival Haemorrhage • Diffuse or localised area of blood under conjunctiva. Asymptomatic • Idiopathic, trauma, cough, sneezing, aspirin, HT • Resolves within 10-14 days Dry Eye Syndrome • Poor quality – Meibomian gland disease,Acne rosacea – Lid related – Vitamin A deficiency • Poor quantity – KCS • Sjogren Syndrome • Rheumatoid Arthritis – Lacrimal disease ie, Sarcoidosis – Paralytic ie, VII CN palsy Lid malposition Pterygium Corneal Abrasion • • • • Surface epithelium sloughed off. Stains with fluorescein Usually due to trauma Pain, FB sensation, tearing, red eye Foreign Body Corneal Ulcer • Infection – Bacterial: Adnexal infection, lid malposition, dry eye, CL – Viral: HSV, HZO – Fungal: – Protozoan: Acanthamoeba in CL wearer • Mechanical or trauma • Chemical: Alkali injuries are worse than acid Episcleritis • Superficial • Idiopathic, collagen vascular disorder (RA) • Asymptomatic, mild pain • Self-limiting or topical treatment Scleritis • Deep • Idiopathic • Collagen vascular disease (RA,AS, SLE, Wegener, PAN) • Zoster • Sarcoidosis • Dull, deep pain wakes patient at night • Systemic treatment with NSAI or Prednisolone if severe Uveitis Anterior: acute recurrent and chronic Posterior: vitritis, retinal vasculitis, retinitis, choroiditis Panuveitis:anterior and posterior Anterior uveitis (iritis) • Photophobia, red eye, decreased vision • Idiopathic. Commonest • Associated to systemic disease – Seronegative arthropathies:AS, IBD, Psoriatic arthritis, Reiter’s – Autoimmune: Sarcoidosis, Behcets – Infection: Shingles, Toxoplasmosis, TB, Syphillis, HIV Ciliary flush Posterior synechiae Fibrin Flare Hypopyon KPs Acute Angle-closure Glaucoma • Symptoms – Pain, headache, nausea-vomiting – Redness, photophobia, – Reduced vision Ciliary hyperaemia – Haloes around lights Corneal oedema Dilated pupil Red Eye Treatment Algorithm • History – – – – – Trauma Contact lens wearer Severe pain/photophobia Significant vision changes History of prior ocular diseases • Exam - Visual loss – – – – Abnormal pupil Ocular tenderness White corneal opacity Increased intraocular pressure YES Refer urgently to ophthalmologist