Diferencia entre revisiones de «Acute angle-closure glaucoma»
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| Línea 1: | Línea 1: | ||
= Background = | = Background = | ||
Pathophysiology | Pathophysiology | ||
*Obstructed aqueous outflow tract | *Obstructed aqueous outflow tract > aqueous humor builds > increased intraocular pressure (IOP) > optic nerve damage > vision loss | ||
*Increased posterior chamber pressure causes iris to bulge forward (iris bombé) | *Increased posterior chamber pressure causes iris to bulge forward (iris bombé) > further obstruction of outflow tract > further increase IOP | ||
*Acute attack is usually precipitated by pupillary dilation | *Acute attack is usually precipitated by pupillary dilation | ||
=Definition: 3 signs + 2 symptoms= | =Definition: 3 signs + 2 symptoms= | ||
*At least 3 of these signs | *At least 3 of these signs: | ||
**IOP >21 mm Hg | **IOP >21 mm Hg | ||
**Conjunctival injection | **Conjunctival injection | ||
| Línea 12: | Línea 12: | ||
**Mid-dilated nonreactive pupil | **Mid-dilated nonreactive pupil | ||
**Shallow anterior chamber with occlusion | **Shallow anterior chamber with occlusion | ||
*At least 2 of these symptoms | *At least 2 of these symptoms: | ||
**Ocular pain | **Ocular pain | ||
**Nausea/vomiting | **Nausea/vomiting | ||
Revisión del 23:40 23 sep 2013
Background
Pathophysiology
- Obstructed aqueous outflow tract > aqueous humor builds > increased intraocular pressure (IOP) > optic nerve damage > vision loss
- Increased posterior chamber pressure causes iris to bulge forward (iris bombé) > further obstruction of outflow tract > further increase IOP
- Acute attack is usually precipitated by pupillary dilation
Definition: 3 signs + 2 symptoms
- At least 3 of these signs:
- IOP >21 mm Hg
- Conjunctival injection
- Corneal epithelial edema
- Mid-dilated nonreactive pupil
- Shallow anterior chamber with occlusion
- At least 2 of these symptoms:
- Ocular pain
- Nausea/vomiting
- History of intermittent blurring of vision with halos
Clinical Features
- Abrupt onset of severe eye pain
- Blurred vision
- Frontal or supraorbital headache
- Nausea / vomiting / abdominal pain
Diagnosis
- Fixed, midposition pupil
- Hazy cornea
- Conjunctival injection most prominent at limbus (ciliary flush)
- Rock-hard globe
- IOP >20 mm Hg
Treatment
Emergent opthalmology consult
To decrease production of aqueous humor, give:
- timolol 0.5% drop: blocks beta receptors on ciliary epithelium
- apraclonidine 1% drop: blocks alpha-2 adrenergic receptors
- acetazolamide 500mg IV or PO: blocks productions of HCO3-, which draws Na+ into the eye; water follows by osmosis to form aqueous humour
To reduce volume of aqueous humor, give:
- mannitol 1–2gm/kg IV: if no contraindications
To facilitate outflow of aqueous humor, give:
- pilocarpine 1%–2% drop: parasympatholytic alkaloid acts on muscarinic receptors found on iris sphincter muscle ==> causes muscle to contract ==> miosis
- In USA - green top
- Use one drop every 15 minutes x 2 doses, then every 4 to 6 hours
- Only effective when IOP <40 mm Hg
Recheck IOP hourly
See Also
Source
Tintinalli
