(1)
Royal Free NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK
Causes of acute red eye
Uniocular
Painless
Normal vision:
Subconjunctival haemorrhage
Episcleritis
Pterygium
Pingueculum
Conjunctivitis
Painful
Normal vision:
Corneal stain:
Negative
Anterior uveitis (iridocyclitis and iritis) (irregular pupil from posterior synechiae, circumcorneal congestion, anterior chamber flare and cells; keratic precipitates on posterior surface of cornea)
Scleritis (redness of the sclera, localized or generalized; diffuse tenderness)
Herpes zoster ophthalmicus (early)
Positive
Corneal abrasion
Herpes simplex keratitis
Marginal ulcer
Vision reduced:
Corneal fluorescein stain negative
Severe uveitis
Acute angle closure glaucoma (circumcorneal congestion; non-reactive, semi-dilated vertically elliptical pupil; corneal oedema or haziness; shallow anterior chamber; severe pain; vomiting; haloes around lights; predisposing factors include a shallow anterior chamber, hypermetropia, and lens abnormalities such as cataracts)
Secondary glaucoma
Corneal fluorescein stain positive
Herpes simplex keratitis (punctate keratitis; small bullous epithelial lesions; dendritic ulcer-branching linear lesion; geographical ulcer)
Bacterial keratitis
Herpes zoster ophthalmicus: clear vesicles on inflamed and hyperaesthetic forehead, upper eyelid or on tip of nose (Hutchinson sign), in distribution of ophthalmic division of trigeminal nerve; punctate or dendritic lesions of cornea; follicular or papillary conjunctivitis; episcleritis
Corneal burn
Acanthamoeba keratitis (contact lens wearer; disproportionate pain; superficial punctuate keratitis; ring infiltrates from coalescing paracentral infiltrates; radial keratoneuritis due to infiltrates along corneal nerves)
Binocular:
No pain/good vision:
Bacterial conjunctivitis: purulent discharge
Viral conjunctivitis
Allergic conjunctivitis
Pain/vision good or poor:
Viral keratoconjunctivitis
Chlamydial keratoconjunctivitis
Arc eye (photokeratitis or ultraviolet keratitis) (pain, lacrimation, foreign body sensation, photophobia, miosis; punctate conjunctival erosions; exposure to welder’s arc, sun lamp in tanning salon or bright snow-covered environment)
Patterns of red eye
Normal/near normal vision
Painful/discomfort
Diffuse superficial redness of bulbar and palpebral conjunctiva, maximal in the fornices: conjunctivitis
Diffuse deep redness: anterior scleritis
Circum-limbal (corneo-scleral junction) redness: keratitis; anterior uveitis; corneal foreign body
Sectoral redness: episcleritis
Painless
Subconjunctival haemorrhage: deep crimson red and confluent
Reduced vision
Normal intraocular pressure
Abnormal cornosclera: corneal abrasion; keratitis
Abnormal uvea: anterior uveitis; endophthalmitis
Raised intraocular pressure
Acute glaucoma
Hypertensive uveitis
Red flags for red eye
Moderate to severe ocular pain
Photophobia
Marked redness of one eye
Loss of visual acuity
Associated bowel or joint symptoms
Checklist for foreign body sensation in the eye
Visual acuity
Pupil size, shape and reactions
Upper and lower fornices of the conjunctiva, including eversion of the upper lid
Fluorescein staining of the cornea; linear vertical corneal abrasions suggest a subtarsal foreign body
Anterior chamber: intraocular foreign body; hyphaema
Clues to cause of conjunctivitis
Bacterial: mucopurulent or purulent discharge
Gonococcal: profuse purulent discharge; severe chemosis and eyelid swelling
Viral: watery, mucous discharge; lacrimation; foreign body sensation; pinpoint subconjunctival haemorrhages; preauricular lymphadenopathy
Epidemic keratoconjunctivitis: chemosis; corneal infiltrates
Herpes simplex: vesicles on eyelid margin or peri-ocular skin; dendritic ulcer
Herpes zoster: rash or vesicles in distribution of naso-ciliary branch of ophthalmic division of trigeminal nerve; dendritic ulcer
Allergic: seasonal; itching, lacrimation; personal or family history of atopy
Risk factors for bacterial keratitis
Local ocular factors
Corneal: abrasion, foreign bodies, exposure, bullous keratopathy
Abnormal tear function: dry eye; dacryocystitis
Abnormal lid function: blepharitis; entropion; ectropion; cicatricialpemphigoid; lagopthalmos; trichiasis
Cosmetic: contact lens wear; cosmetic eye makeup
Drugs and treatments: topical corticosteroids; cyanoacrylate adhesive; ocular surgery
Systemic factors: immunosuppressive therapy; diabetes mellitus; coma; alcoholism; burns; Stevens-Johnson syndrome; AIDS
Causes of hyphaema
Ocular trauma: blunt; penetrating
Intra-ocular tumours: ocular melanoma; retinoblastoma; metastatic tumours
Coagulopathy: von Willebrand disease; thrombocytopenia; haemophilia; leukaemia
Neovascularisation of the iris: proliferative diabetic retinopathy; carotid stenosis
Post-surgical: cataract extraction; trabeculectomy; pars plana vitrectomy
Causes of periorbital redness and swelling
Orbital inflammation
No proptosis
Infections
Pre-septal cellulitis (secondary to lid trauma –e.g. insect or animal bite, minor trauma-e.g. eyelid abrasion; lid skin infections-stye, dacryocystitis, herpes simplex; conjunctivitis; associated with upper respiratory tract infections and sinusitis; normal visual acuity and pupillary reflexes)
Dacryocystitis (tense painful erythematous swelling below the medial canthal ligament)
Dacryoadenitis (painful erythematous swelling of the lateral upper eyelid, with or without ptosis)
Blepharitis (erythema and thickening of eyelid margins; crusting and scales, with eyelash loss; eyelashes may stick together)
Conjunctivitis
Endophthalmitis
Non-infectious causes
Allergic reaction
Proptosis
Orbital infections: orbital cellulitis (lid oedema; pain with eye movements; conjunctival hyperaemia and chemosis; ophthalmoplegia; optic nerve involvement with reduced visual acuity; fever; loss of sensation related to the ophthalmic and maxillary divisions of the trigeminal nerve; may involve spread of infection from paranasal sinuses, especially the ethmoid or frontal sinuses); cavernous sinus thrombosis
Endocrine: thyroid eye disease
Inflammatory: systemic inflammatory disorders: Wegener’s granulomatosis, sarcoidosis; orbital pseudotumour
Neoplasm: lymphoma; lymphoproliferative disorders; rhabdomyosarcoma; choroidal malignant melanoma with extra-ocular spread; metastatic carcinoma
Carotid-cavernous fistula (proptosis; conjunctival chemosis; exposure keratopathy; poorly reactive dilated mid-position pupil; retinal vein congestion; raised intraocular pressure)
Retrobulbar haemorrhage/abscess
Risk factors for mucormycosis
Diabetic ketoacidosis
Haematological malignancy
Bone marrow and solid organ transplant recipients
Steroid therapy
Intravenous drug use
Burns
Causes of diplopia (double vision)
Monocular
Extra-ocular: optical lens or contact lens problem
Ocular
Strabismus
Lid: chalazion
Cornea: infection, trauma, distortion (keratoconus)
Iris: pharmacological mydriasis
Lens: cataract; subluxation
Retina: detachment, central retinal vein occlusion
Uncorrected refractive error (resolves with pinhole testing)
Binocular
Cranial nerve palsies (infranuclear): III, IV, VI
Myopathies: thyroid eye disease; myasthenia gravis
Trauma: orbital blow-out fracture
Orbital lesions: cellulitis; neoplasm
Supranuclear lesions: internuclear ophthalmoplegia (horizontal diplopia with weakness of adduction of ipsilateral eye and nystagmus of the contralateral abducting eye); brainstem ischaemia (pons or midbrain lesions)
Checklist for diplopia
Resting position of the eyes
Eyelid function: ptosis
Visual acuity in each eye separately and then both together
Pupil size and reactivity
Ocular motility; disconjugate eye movements; nystagmus
Other cranial nerves
Cerebellar function
Fatigability of eye movements (myasthenia gravis)
Causes of acute visual loss
Uniocularvisual loss
Central:
Retinal:
Age related macular degeneration (either dry, with drusen and pigmentary changes in the macula, or wet, with choroidal neovascularisation)
Venous and arterial occlusions: central retinal vein/branch retinal vein occlusion (retinal haemorrhages in all four quadrants, dilated tortuous retinal branch veins, multiple cotton wool spots, macular and optic disc oedema, neovascularisation of the iris, retina or optic disc); central retinal artery/branch retinal artery occlusion(attenuated retinal arteries; retinal opacification, whitening and oedema-ground-glass retina; cherry red spot in macula due to cilio-retinal sparing; amaurosis fugax; relative afferent pupillary defect)Full access? Get Clinical Tree