LL: Diplopia by Dr. Chady
- Binocular vs Monocular
- Bi – Double vision that resolves when the other eye is closed
- DDx: Posterior circulation stroke, Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis, Compressive intracranial aneurysm, Botulism, MG
LL: Hematuria by Dr. Sawmiller
- DDx: microscopic vs macroscopic
- Micro : stones infection, viral illnesses, trauma, exercise, menstruation, renal disease, instrumentation
- Macroscopic: renal tumors, avm, aortocaval fistula, kidney stone, trauma, uti, STI
- Workup:
- UA microscopy, CT urogram ( Ct A/P w/ and wo
- MRI urography, noncon CT, US abd/pelvis, retrograde pyelogram
- Cystoscopy
- Asymptomatic hematuria – Cancer
- Trauma >50 RBC get ct scan to assess for injury
- RUG in urethral injury or pelvic fractures
Ophthalmology Lecture
Vahid
- Visual acuity: near vision card, count fingers, hand motion (what direction is the hand moving), Light perception
- Pupils : Shape, size, direct response and consensual response
- Anisocoria – CTA head/neck Horner syndrome (ptosis, miosis, anhidrosis), carotid dissection, pancoast tumor
- Dark room, small pupil horner syndrome dissection pancoast
- Bright room, large pupil, poor constriction of the big pupil
- Wipes and plants vs 3rd nerve palsy
- 3rd nerve palsy, MRI MRA
– EYE Pressure (IOP)
– eye drop pocket technique
– Tap central cornea, breath normally, normal below 22, ED 23-30 could be reasonable.
– Hold eyelid against orbital rim
– Eye Movements
– entrapment – ischemia of the muscle
– Oculocardiac reflex – bradycardia n/v
– exotropia (outward), esotropia (inward) – call optho
– Amblyopia lazy eye – could be a brain problem
– Pain full eye
– corneal abrasion
– flip upper eyelid if linear abrasions
– Pinch eyelash, place cotton tip above the tarsal plate
– Tx: mechanism wood sticks, fingernail, contactlens – moxifloxacin 4x/day for 5 days
– Large, central moxifloxacin QID for 5 days
– Corneal foreign body – qtip preferred , 30 gauge needle bend to 75 degrees, bevel away from the eye, sweeping movement up and down not at the eye
– rust ring remove in the optho clinic – burr increases risk of scar
Cases
Nail glue on eye – erythromycin ointments
Chemical injury
- Irrigate the eye
- Check pH and recheck pH
- pH should be 7.5
Corneal ulcer and hypopyon
- Infiltration, satellite lesions
- Acanthamoeba – swilling corneal ulcer
Blunt trauma
- Subconjunctival hemorrhage – resolves 2-3weeks
- Hyphema – traumatic rupture of iris blood vessel
- High IOP – glaucoma and cornea staining
- African american patients with hyphema check for sickle cell at high risk of IOP
- Needs close follow up Grade 1 & 2, call optho 3&4
- IOP most important
- Ipressure lower drops
Traumatic Iritis
- Happens 2 to 3 days after trauma
- Traumatic mydriasis
- Photophobia
Retrobulbar hemorrhage
- Orbital compartment syndrome – blood in the back of the eye
- Needs lateral canthotomy and cantholysis (C&C)
- Proptotic , cant move, pupil big, vision blurry, chemosis
- Lateral Canthotomy and cantholysis
- Numb the eye, clamp cantho tendo with hemostat, hold eyelid with forcep and cut with iris or wescot scissors if you have
- Inferior ramus of the lateral canthal tendon
- Cut so the inferior eyelid can be pulled up to the limbus
- Superior cantholysis (superior ramus) be careful to avoid lacrimal gland
- Lateral Canthotomy and cantholysis
Lacerations
- Simple-
- Margin – optho does this repair
- Canalicular laceration – laceration lateral near the medial punctum
- Needs a stent oculplastics does
Globe rupture – penetrating trauma
- No IOP, no fluorocene no drops
- CT w/o contrast
- Vanc and levaquin
- Tear drop pupil – iris protrudes
- Fly the eye place an eyeshield
CRAO – central retinal artery occlusion
- Cherry red spot
- Activate code stroke
- < 8 hr activate code LVO
- tPA intraarterial
Giant Cell Arteritis
- Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy
- Visual acuity RAPD Relative afferent pupillary defect , jaw claudication (do you get tired when chewing), proximal stiffness
- ESR, CRP, CBC
- High dose IV steroid
Chalazion (Stye)
- Warm compress
- Abx ointment
Preseptal cellulitis and orbital
- Orbital cellulitis – eye bulging, pupil changing, subperiosteal abscess
- Risk factor – sinusitis
- CT orbits with constrast
Conjectivits
- Viral vs bacterial
- Allergic pataday eye drops
- Bacterial Purulent topical moxifloxacin
Optic Neuritis
- Color vision problems
- pixelated/static vision poorly reactive pupil
- Painful eye movement up and inward
- MRI Brain/orbit
Acute Angle closure glaucoma
- pain , blurry, headache, n/v
- Mid dilated nonreactive to light
- IOP 30s/40s
- Recent nasal decongestant
- Tx: IOP lowering drops, IV diamox, IV mannitol
Kids
- Red light reflex absent is bad
- White reflex
- Urgent optho
- Causes retinoblastoma, congenital cataract
- Eye hand book app
Slitlamp
- Cell and flare
- 1mm , mag 1.6x, brightest light, 30degrees
Jimmy webb travels
- Angioedema
- Trips abroad
- Drake passage is where the pacific meets the atlantic
- World explorer is a big boat
- No boat if you are on dialysis
- McGowan watches how people walk
- She gives people fall risk bracelets
- Cruise ship doc really good a sea sickness, diarrhea
- Practicing emergency medicine physician expedition doctor – 3 to 4 weeks
- Complicating factors that influence patient care
- Jimmy organized
- Too much scopolamine causes naked running
- Really good boot cleaning
- Really cool rocks in antarctica
- Watch out for the bird flu
- Really cool rocks in argentina
- Wilderness med education swiss alps put on by Utah
- Chamonix
- Mount Blanc highest mount in the Alps
- There is a higher mountain western russian
- Mount Blanc highest mount in the Alps
- Rich Ingerstein wilderness med book
- Jimmy looks good in jorts
- 2 french girls said there was a demon on the trail
- It was an Ibex
- Nex care tape is the best for blister
- Chamonix
- Lithuania
- Formal global health elective