Red Flags:
Slit lamp examination under LA looking for:
Management:
abbreviated handbook of rules - RVEEH
1. Always test and record vision
2. Never pad a discharging eye
3. Any blurred vision requires prompt investigation
4. refer squint (strabismus) when it is 1st detected because
5. Irritable eyes are often dry
6. Beware the unilateral red eye
7. Refer patients with eyelid ulcers - may be BCC
8. Conjunctivitis is almost always bilateral
9. A corneal abrasion should heal in 24 hours if the cause is removed
10. Never use steroids if herpes simp1ex is suspected
11. Retinal detachment requires referral
12. More mistakes in medicine are made by not lookinq than not knowing
13. Prevent corneal exposure - during general anaesthesia
14. Steroids are dangerous. Complications of steroids include
15. If there is a corneal abrasion, look for a foreign body - evert lid. Look for eyelashes
16. Leave some foreign bodies alone
17. Consider an intra-ocular foreign body
18. Sudden loss of vision is an emergency
19. penetrating eye injury is an emergency
20. With facial and lid injuries first exclude eye injury
21. Using the ophthalmoscope
22. Irrigate chemical burns
23. Optic discs are easily seen
24. Behind the black eye there may be a blunt eye injury
25. Transient blindness can be serious
26. Blindness in diabetes mellitus is largely preventable
27. Hypertensive retinopathy
28. Headaches are rarely due to a refractive cause
29. Visual field defects are ocular (horizontal) or central (vertical)
30. Pupil examination – differential diagnoses
31. Cataract surgery is the most common eye operation
32. Chronic open-angle-glaucoma requires screening
33. Acute angle closure glaucoma is rare
34. Urgent admission for the following
35. Beware of herpes zoster ophthalmicus if the nose is involved
Caused by an interruption to sympathetic pathway causing a triad:
urgent ophthalmological referral for intervention to reduce intra-ocular pressure