Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-18 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 8:1


1272 Red Cell Enzymes Refractive Disorders (Ametropias)

management
n/a

specific therapy
■No specific therapy is available.
■Avoidance of hemolysis-inducing drugs (and in some instances Fava
beans) in G6PD, GC and GSH synthase, and congenital glutathione
reductase deficiencies
■Splenectomy – not curative, but may ameliorate hemolysis in PK
and GPI deficiencies; may be necessary in infancy in transfusion-
dependent patients

follow-up
■Identify and counsel relatives at risk for defect.
■Prevent folate deficiency.
■Provide list of hemolysis-inducing agents to the patient to avoid
recurrence.
■In life-threatening cases, consider prenatal diagnosis after identify-
ing a specific mutation.

complications and prognosis
■Nonspecific complications of any chronic hemolytic state: jaundice,
leg ulcers, splenomegaly, gallstones, aplastic crises from Parvovirus
infection

REFRACTIVE DISORDERS (AMETROPIAS)


DAVID G. HWANG, MD, FACS


history & physical
■Emmetropia (normal vision)
➣Refractive disorders: images are not formed in precise focus on
the retina
➣Regular ametropias can be fully optically corrected using sphero-
cylindrical lenses. Includes hyperopia (farsightedness), myopia
(nearsightedness), regular astigmatism, and presbyopia (age-
related loss of accommodation).
➣Irregular ametropias cannot be fully corrected using lenses, most
commonly due to inhomogeneity in the corneal power (irregu-
lar corneal astigmatism), less commonly due to irregularities in
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