Mark W. Leitman

Manual for Eye Examination and Diagnosis


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Visual hallucinations These most often occur in the elderly, especially in those with dementia, psychosis, or reduced sensory stimulation, as in blindness and deafness. Many medications, including cephalosporins, sulfa drugs, dopamines used to treat Parkinson’s disease, vasoconstrictors, or vasodilators should be considered. Increased tearing (epiphora) Consider increased production due to emotion and eye irritation or decreased ability of a normally generated tear to drain into the nose. (Fig. 149)

      Record all systemic diseases. Diabetes and thyroid disease are two that are most commonly associated with eye disease.

      Diabetes mellitus

      1 Diabetes may be first diagnosed when there are large changes in spectacle correction causing blurriness. It is due to the effect of blood sugar changes on the lens of the eye.

      2 Diabetes is one of the common causes of III, IV, and VI cranial nerve paralysis. It is due to the closure of brainstem vessels. The resulting diplopia may be the first symptom of diabetes and often resolves by 10 weeks.

      3 Retinopathy due to microvascular disease (see front and back cover) may result in macular edema. It is the primary reason for blindness before age 65. Patients with diabetes should have annual eye exams, because early treatment is critical. Retinopathy is rare in children before age 15.

      Autoimmune (Graves’) thyroid disease

      This is a condition in which an orbitopathy may be present with hyper‐ but also hypo‐ or euthyroid disease.

Photo depicts thyroid exophthalmos with exposed sclera at superior limbus, due to bulging eye.

      1 It is the most common cause of bulging eyes, referred to as exophthalmos (proptosis). This is due to fibroblast proliferation and mucopolysaccharide infiltration of the orbit. A small white area of sclera appearing between the lid and upper cornea is diagnostic of thyroid disease 90% of the time (Fig. 1). This exposed sclera may be a result of exophthalmos or thyroid lid retraction due to the stimulation of Müller’s muscle that elevates the lid. Severe orbitopathy may be treated with radiation, surgical decompression of the orbit (Fig. 3), or by administering steroids orally, intravenously, or by injection into the orbit. In January 2020, the FDA approved the human monoclonal antibody, teprotumumab, to treat proptosis, strabismus, and compressive optic neuropathy from thyroid eye disease. It reduced proptosis by more than 2 mm in 71–83% of patients.

      1 Infiltration of eye muscles may cause diplopia, which is confirmed by a computed tomography (CT) scan (Figs 2 and 3).

Photo depicts CT scan of thyroid orbitopathy showing fluid infiltration of the medial rectus muscle (M) and normal lateral rectus muscle (L) and proptosis. Compression of left optic nerve could cause optic neuropathy. This is called crowded apex syndrome.

      Source: Courtesy of Jack Rootman.

      1 Exophthalmos may cause excessive exposure of the eye in the day and an inability to close the lids at night (lagophthalmos), resulting in corneal dessication.Fig 3 Orbital CT scan of Graves’ orbitopathy before surgical decompression (above) and right orbital floor osteotomy (below). Often three, but rarely all four, bony walls may be opened. Note thickened extra ocular muscles.Source: Courtesy of Lelio Baldeschi, MD, and Ophthalmology, July 2007, Vol. 114, pp. 1395–1402.

      2 Optic nerve compression is the worst complication and occurs in 4% of patients with thyroid disease. It could cause permanent loss of vision (Fig. 2) and immediate intravenous steroids should be considered when vision is threatened.

      Record patient medications. Those taking the following commonly prescribed drugs are often referred to an eye doctor to monitor ocular side effects.

Photo depicts bull’s eye maculopathy due to hydroxychloroquine in a patient with systemic lupus. The vasculitis and white cotton-wool spots are due to lupus.

      Source: Courtesy of Russel Rand, MD, and Arch. Ophthalmol., Apr. 2000, Vol. 118, pp. 588–589. Copyright 2000, American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

      Ethambutol, rifampin, isoniazid, and streptomycin—taken mainly for tuberculosis—may all cause optic neuropathy. The antidepressants Paxil, Prozac, and Zoloft may also cause optic neuropathy. Corticosteroids may cause posterior subcapsular cataracts (Fig. 429), glaucoma, and a reduction in immunity that may increase the incidence of herpes virus and other infections.

Photo depicts phenothiazine maculopathy with pigment mottling of the macula.