HEAD, EYE, EAR, NOSE, AND THROAT
EMERGENCIES
SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Patients typically describe flashing lights and floaters, sometimes described
as “spider webs” or “coal dust.”
■ Visual field defects are a late symptom.
■ The retina appears like dunes on a beach or a curtain folded forward.
TREATMENT
■ Ophthalmology consultation
■ Urgency depends on visual acuity.
■ If the macula is still attached and acuity intact, surgical repair by a retina
specialist is recommended within 24–48 hours (to prevent macula from
detaching also).
■ If the vision is poor, the macula is likely already detached, and repair is
less urgent (within 5–7 days acceptable).
Lens Dislocation
May occur anteriorly or posteriorly (more common)
ETIOLOGY
■ Trauma (classically by air bag deployment)
■ Idiopathic
■ Marfan syndrome
SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Iridodonesis: Trembling iris after rapid eye movements
■ Monocular diplopia (two images seen with one eye)
TREATMENT
Urgent (not emergent) ophthalmology follow-up
COMPLICATIONS
Acute angle closure glaucoma
Central Retinal Artery Occlusion
ETIOLOGY
■ Atherosclerotic plaque embolizes to artery (eg, from internal carotid)
■ Hyperviscosity syndrome (multiple myeloma)
■ Trauma with fat embolus
■ Patients with sickle cell or DM
■ Temporal arteritis (5% of cases)
SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Sudden painless monocular vision loss
■ Afferent pupillary defect
■ Fundoscopy shows “box car” look to the retinal arterioles, a “cherry red
spot” after the first few hours; a pale disk is a much later sign (seen weeks
later). (See Figure 14.43.)