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Ophthalmologic and ENT Emergencies

Ophthalmologic and ENT Emergencies. William Beaumont Hospital Department of Emergency Medicine. Sudden Loss of Vision. Central retinal artery occlusion Central retinal vein occlusion Retrobulbar neuritis Amaurosis fugax Retinal detachment. Central Retinal Artery Occlusion.

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Ophthalmologic and ENT Emergencies

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  1. Ophthalmologic and ENT Emergencies William Beaumont Hospital Department of Emergency Medicine

  2. Sudden Loss of Vision • Central retinal artery occlusion • Central retinal vein occlusion • Retrobulbar neuritis • Amaurosis fugax • Retinal detachment

  3. Central Retinal Artery Occlusion • Sudden monocular painless, complete loss of vision • Fundoscopic exam: pale retina with macular red spot

  4. Central Retinal Artery Occlusion Treatment • STAT opthy consult • Digital massage of the globe • Increase CO2 (arteriolar dilatation) – carbonic anhydrase inhibitor (i.e. acetazolamide) • Definitive treatment – paracentesis of the anterior chamber

  5. Central Retinal Vein Occlusion • Sudden monocular painless, and near complete loss of vision • Fundoscopic exam: chaotic, blood-streaked retina • Stat ophthalmology consult

  6. Optic Neuritis • Progressive loss of central vision • May be painful, scotoma, flashing lights • Peripheral vision preserved • Associated with multiple sclerosis in 25% of cases

  7. Amaurosis Fugax • Fleeting painless loss of monocular vision • Due to minute emboli of the central retinal artery • Consult neurology for TIA workup

  8. Retinal Detachment • Painless • Prodromal floaters or flashing lights, followed by “lowering curtain” • Opthy consult

  9. Red Eye • Acute angle closure glaucoma • Acute iritis • Conjunctivitis • Herpes simplex keratitis • Corneal ulceration • Chemical conjunctivitis • Corneal abrasions

  10. Acute Angle Glaucoma • Sudden severe unilateral ocular pain • Decreased visual acuity • Precipitous increased IOP  blindness if untreated • Symptoms: HA, nausea, blurred vision or rainbow halos • Pupil dilatation is often precipitant event from sympathomimetics, parasympatholytics, stress, fatigue, darkness.

  11. Acute Angle Glaucoma • Red eye • Nonreactive mid-dilated pupil • Corneal edema • Shallow anterior chamber • High intraocular pressure (60-90)** • Hazy cornea **Normal IOP <20

  12. Glaucoma Treatment • Stat opthy consult for definitive treatment – iridectomy • Timolol – beta blocker • Pilocarpine – parasympathomimetic • Acetazolamide – carbonic anhydrase inhibitor • Mannitol • 50% glycerol – oral hyperosmotic – if patient can tolerate PO – give in place of mannitol

  13. Timolol Solution • Beta blocker • Decreases aqueous humor formation • 0.5% solution – 1-2 drops at 10-15 min intervals x 3, then 1 drop every 12 hours

  14. Pilocarpine • Parasympathomimetic • Produces miosis • 2% solution – 1 drop every 30 minutes until the pupil constricts, then 1 drop every 6 hours • Side effects: bradycardia, hypotension, sweating, tremors

  15. Acetazolamide • Carbonic anhydrase inhibitor • Inhibits aqueous humor formation • 500 mg IV every 12 hours or 500 mg PO every 6 hours • Side effects: respiratory depression, metabolic acidosis

  16. Mannitol • Increases blood osmolality, creating a gradient that draws water from the vitreous cavity • 20% 1-2 grams/kg IV over 30-60 minutes • Side effects: headache, confusion, CHF, dehydration

  17. Acute Iritis • Blurred vision, photophobia, ocular pain • Exam: • Ciliary flush • Anterior chamber cells and flare • Constricted pupil • Decreased visual acuity • Lower IOP • Consensual photophobia

  18. Acute Iritis: Treatment • Cycloplegics • i.e. Homatropine – dilates the eyes • Topical steroids • Close opthy follow up

  19. Acute Iritis

  20. Conjunctivitis • Nonpainful red eye • Bacterial, viral, or allergic

  21. Herpes Simplex Keratitis • Red eye with foreign body sensation • Dendritic fluorescein uptake • Treatment: acyclovir drops, cycloplegics • Steroids contraindicated • Opthy consult

  22. Corneal Ulceration • Red, painful eye • Slit lamp • White flocculent infiltrate of the cornea • Hypopyon • Anterior chamber exudate • May lead to corneal destruction and perforation • ?Admit, IV antibiotics

  23. Corneal Ulceration

  24. Chemical Conjunctivitis • Alkali burn – absolute ocular emergency • Liquefactive necrosis • Immediate irrigation (pH 7-7.5) • Opthy consult • Only opthy emergency in which visual acuity is not checked until after therapy has begun

  25. Alkali Burns

  26. Chemical Conjunctivitis • Acid burn • Coagulative necrosis • Immediate irrigation as above • Opthy consult

  27. Corneal Abrasions • Foreign body sensation and photophobia • Diagnose: fluorescein uptake with slit lamp exam • rule out foreign body with lid eversion • Suspect foreign body if “ice rink sign” – fine linear abrasions in upper 1/3 cornea • Rule out corneal ulceration • Do not use steroid drops –may be difficult to rule out early HS keratitis • Treatment: antibiotic ointment/drops, analgesics • Prognosis is very good

  28. Corneal Abrasion

  29. Traumatic Eye Injuries • Corneal laceration • Perforated globe • Intraocular foreign body • Hyphema • Blow-out orbital fracture • Traumatic iritis or retinal detachment

  30. Corneal Laceration • Tear shaped pupil – prolapse of the iris • Small black fragments representing iris pigment may be seen and initially mistaken for a foreign body • May not see the laceration itself • Treatment: metal shield, STAT opthy consult for surgical repair

  31. Corneal Laceration

  32. Perforated Globe • Suspect if penetrating wound to the eyelid • Decreased visual acuity, soft globe (do not palpate) • Fundoscopic exam may reveal vitreous hemorrhage • Treatment: Metal shield, STAT opthy consult for surgical repair

  33. Intraocular Foreign Body • Patient often gives a history of striking metal on metal • May be initially painless, but then patient develops monocular pain and decreased visual acuity • May not see the wound • Diagnosis: CT scan, ultrasound or x-ray of the globe • Treatment: Opthy consult for surgical removal

  34. Orbital Foreign Body

  35. Hyphema • Hemorrhage in the anterior chamber • See blood/vitreous line in inferior iris • Treatment • Bed rest • Head of bed elevation • Opthy consult • Steroids • Miotics

  36. Blow-out Orbital Fracture • Blunt globe trauma (i.e. fist to eye) transmits forces that lead to orbital floor fracture • Inferior rectus muscle may prolapse through the fracture • Pain and diplopia or loss of upward gaze, enophthalmos (sunken eye), infraorbital anesthesia • Treatment: OR if entrapment, opthy consult

  37. Blow-out Fracture

  38. Moving on to ENT Emergencies…

  39. Ear Disorders • Auricular hematoma • Otitis externa • Malignant otitis externa • Ramsey Hunt • Foreign body • Tympanic membrane rupture • Otits media

  40. Auricular Hematoma • Blunt trauma • Untreated, can result in cartilage necrosis (“cauliflower ear”) • Treatment: • Needle aspiration • Compression dressing

  41. Auricular Hematoma

  42. Otitis Externa • Swelling of the external canal • Pain with movement of the auricula • Treatment: • Abx/steroid ear drops • Ear wick

  43. Malignant Otitis Externa • Deep pain with movement of TMJ, granulation tissue on the floor of the auditory canal at bony-cartilage junction • Immunocompromised patient • Pseudomonas aeruginosa • Facial nerve paralysis  multiple CN involvement  meningitis • Treatment: STAT ENT consult, surgical debridement, IV abx

  44. Malignant Otitis Externa

  45. Ramsay Hunt Syndrome • Herpes Zoster • Vesicular rash of ext auditory canal & auricle • Usually with sensorineural hearing loss and facial nerve paralysis • Treatment: • Admit • IV acyclovir • Steroids

  46. Ramsay Hunt Syndrome

  47. Ear Foreign Body • Tools for removal: • Irrigation (not vegetable matter) • Alligator forceps • Suction • Hook • Cerumen loop • Live insects should be stupefied with lidocaine or mineral oil prior to removal

  48. Ear Disorders • Tympanic membrane rupture – ENT referral • Otitis media – hopefully you all know what this is

  49. Nasal Disorders • Epistaxis • Foreign body • Acute sinusitis • Cavernous sinus thrombosis

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