1 / 12

Case Discussion: Mrs. Enriqueta Sumibcay

Case Discussion: Mrs. Enriqueta Sumibcay. OPHTHALMOLOGY CLERKSHIP ROTATION Quirino memorial medical center Matthew S. Parco July 30, 2011. Background and Chief Complaint.

marc
Télécharger la présentation

Case Discussion: Mrs. Enriqueta Sumibcay

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Case Discussion:Mrs. EnriquetaSumibcay OPHTHALMOLOGY CLERKSHIP ROTATION Quirino memorial medical center Matthew S. Parco July 30, 2011

  2. Background and Chief Complaint • Patient is a 58 y/o female, married, who came with the Chief Complaint of “umuulapnapaningin”, or cloudiness of vision, OD. • Birthdate: July 15, 1952

  3. History of Present Illness • 5 years PTC, patient noticed cloudiness with blurring of vision. Associated symptoms include glare and periorbitalpain with ocular movements, graded 5/10. Progressive cloudiness and blurring occurred from onset of symptoms, hence this consult.

  4. Past Medical History, Family History, and Social History • PMH • Diabetes Mellitus, type II • Glibenclamide 5g/tablet, OD • Metformin 90g/tablet, TID • Hypertension • Amlodipine 100mg/tablet, OD • FH • Hypertension (maternal side) • SH • Currently married. Has strong family support. • Housewife.

  5. Physical Examination • Gross Eye Examination • Lids and lashes • No tearing, matting of lashes, or masses • Eyeball • Anictericsclerae • Pink palpebral conjunctiva • Clear cornea • Visual Acuity • OD • SC – 20/400 • PH – 20/70 -1 • Near Vision – J10 • OS • SC – 20/20 -1 • PH – not done • Near Vision – J4 • Extraocular Muscle Movements - Intact

  6. Physical Examination (con't). • Pupils • OD • 2-3 mm, brisk and reactive, RAPD • OS • 2-3 mm, brisk and reactive, RAPD • Digital Tonometry • Both soft • Ophthalmoscopy • Positive ROR • Clear media • Distinct borders • Cup-disk ratio is 0.3. • AV ratio is 2:3 • No hemorrhages or exudates. • Good foveal reflexes.

  7. Assessment and Plan • Assessment • Senile Mature Cataract, OD • Plan • Phacoemulsification with Posterior Chamber Lens Implantation

  8. Course in the Wards • July 27 • 1:00 PM • Admitted to Ophthalmology Department ward • Given prophylactic Moxifloxacin drops 1 gtts every 4 hours. • Blood pressure and other vitals taken every 4 hours. • July 28 • 12: 00 AM • Patient put on NPO. • 5:00 AM • Pre-operative checks done. • 10:00 AM • Patient transferred to Operation Room for surgery. • 11:00 AM • Post-operation. Transferred back to the Ward. • July 29 • 8:00 AM • Discharged

  9. Post-Operation • Pupils • OD • 2-3 mm, brisk and reactive, RAPD • OS • 2-3 mm, brisk and reactive, RAPD • Digital Tonometry • Both soft • Ophthalmoscopy • Positive ROR • Clear media • Distinct borders • Cup-disk ratio is 0.3. • AV ratio is 2:3 • No hemorrhages or exudates. • Good foveal reflexes. • Patient noted minimal pain afterward (4/10). • Gross Eye Examination • Lids and lashes • No tearing, matting of lashes, or masses • Eyeball • Anictericsclerae • Pink palpebral conjunctiva • Clear cornea • Visual Acuity • OD • SC – ~20/200 • PH – not done. • Near Vision – J4 • OS • SC – 20/20 -1 • PH – not done • Near Vision – J4 • Extraocular Muscle Movements– Intact

  10. Discussion: Etiology • Senile Mature Cataracts are often caused by oxidative damage to the proteins of the lens, which often overpower antioxidants as one ages. • Increased exposure to light, such as living in equatorial or high altitude regions, as well as certain occupations, make some people more prone to developing cataracts.

  11. Discussion: Treatment • The most effective and common treatment is Extracapsular Cataract Extraction (ECCE), in which the majority of the lens capsule is left intact. • High frequency sound waves (phacoemulsification) are often used in order to break the lens prior to extraction.

  12. Discussion: Prognosis • Many patients who underwent ECCE/Phacoemulsification usually gain 2 lines in the Snellen chart. • However, risk factors for development of after-cataracts do exist among patients with Diabetes Mellitus.

More Related