Need to brush up on your Ophthalmology?

One our own Ophtho residents, Dr. Mark Mugavin (PGY-3), has started a YouTube channel where he is posting a series of Ophtho lectures as part of an education project. These lectures are designed for non-Ophtho residents who may run into eye complaints in their practice – AKA us.

So far he has 3 lectures posted, Ophthalmology ER, Pupils, and Practical Ophthalmology Trauma. I’ve watched them and found them helpful, would especially recommend them to the interns. Here’s the link to his channel:

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCam8_P1v8f1t72k52vR9gbw

Hypotension

Late 70s year old female with chief complaint of dizziness and fatigue. Patient has a medical history of HTN and recent cataract surgery.  In triage patient was hypotensive with BP of 70\35 and Bradycardic with a heart rate ranging from 55-60, O2 sats 100% on room air and afebrile.

I found the patient to be lethargic. Otherwise her exam was unremarkable with no focal neurologic deficits, cardiac and pulmonary exam unremarkable, and no abdominal pain. Her husband was in the room and states that they were on their way to their grandson’s high school graduation and she began complaining of feeling dizzy and she started to become lethargic. She had not been sick recently and before this morning she was completely at her baseline. To note yesterday her blood pressure was 180/95 when she checked at home so she typically runs high. No new changes to her medications which consisted of metoprolol Succinate 100mg QD and a Baby Aspirin.

As I talked to the husband he went on to explain that she had recently had cataract surgery on her left eye and that this morning she had a follow up appointment with her ophthalmologist. While at the ophthalmologist appointment the doctor said that the pressure in her eye was high and she received some drops in her eye to bring the pressure down but the husband could not remember the name of the drops.

So I started by getting CBC, CMP, TSH, Urine, Chest xray, EKG, Troponin and a head CT to complete my little old lady AMS workup. Obviously the differential diagnosis for AMS in the elderly is vast so I was considering a lot of different possibilities.  While I waited for her results to come back I called her Ophthalmologist that she had seen that morning to see what drops she had received. Ends up she got Alphagan which is an alpha agonist, Trusopt which is a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, and 3 drops of Timolol. I discussed with him the possibility of the Timolol on top of her morning metoprolol 100mg as potentially causing her hypotension and bradycardia. He stated he had never seen that happen in his 16 yrs of practice but it is theoretically possible. A quick Uptodate search confirmed that hypotension can occur in as many as 10% of patients using Timolol eye drops which to me was a surprisingly high number.

So I’ll go ahead and cut to the good stuff. All of her labs and imaging returned unremarkable and her EKG just showed sinus bradycardia with a rate of 57.  Ultimately she got 2L of Normal Saline and we watched her for about 5 hrs. Throughout her stay her blood pressure steadily increased and at the time of her discharge she was 135/86 with a heart rate of 74 and she was back to her baseline and much more awake.

I thought this was an interesting case as it seems relatively rare for topical eye drops to result in systemic side effects however in the right patient population it can result in severe side effects. A quick literature search brought up multiple case reports of patient’s having symptomatic bradycardia and even syncope resulting from Timolol use.

So definitely something to keep in mind if you have a elderly or frail patient with acute angle glaucoma who is already on beta blocker therapy. Maybe trying other drops first instead of Timolol or at least be sure to make the patient aware of the possibility of side effects including hypotension, bradycardia, fatigue, and even syncope so they know what to watch out for.

Ophtho

Hey folks,

Just wanted to share a little treasure I found a few years ago and may be of some use to others. This website is awesome for eyeballs, there is all sorts of instructional videos and  pathology-related videos.  The link below is about the basic slit-lamp exam. It includes how to use the scope,  how to do the exam, what to look for, and some basic examples of pathology.  The full website is at rootatlas.com , but if you’re a beginner with eyeballs (as I fear I may always be), then I’d start with this guy:

http://www.rootatlas.com/wordpress/video/874/slit-lamp-exam-video/

To FOAM!

–Zach