Eye - Pathology
Eye - Pathology
Rectus muscles attach to orbital apex form cone Classification of pathology: extraconal / intraconal Remember the six muscles (4xRectus, 2xOblique) & nerves (CN3/4/6) Clinical approach: the six Ps Pain Proptosis Progression Palpation Pulsation Periorbital changes
Can cause: Exposure keratopathy, diplopia, compressive optic neuropathy Inferior, then medial rectus most often affected o CT: thickened muscles with normal tendons
Clinically: see whites of eyes above irides conjunctiva protruding from lids Later: thyroid stare Pathophysiology: largely unknown Autoimmune (thyroid-stimulating IGs mimic TSH, other stuff?) Histology: Mononuclear cells in muscle 1
Orbital Septum
 
Key anatomic landmark in surgery / trauma Separates true orbit from stuff outside (eyelids, etc)
Arises from periosteum (over superior / inferior orbital rims)
Preseptal Cellulitis
Infection of structures anterior to orbital septum  Orbital contents are uninvolved Etiology: Staph, strep mostly Dx: CT / MRI can help Rx: Oral/topical/IV antibiotics, drain abscesses, fix blepharitis
Orbital cellulitis
From spread of infection into orbit through septum (anterior), orbital walls (posterior / medial), or hematogenous Presentation:  Proptosis  Chemosis (swelling/edema of conjunctiva)  Pain with eye movement  Frozen globe: mobility restriction (pics)  muscles involved!  Fever Complications: can track into other areas
  Orbital apex syndrome (compressive optic neuropathy, othalmoplegia, blindness) Cavernous sinus thrombosis (cranial nerve palsies  brain abscess, death) o WORK UP aggressively if suspected (including LP)
Dx: Rx:
Eyelids
Skin, subcutaneous tissue Muscles:
Opening (retraction)  Levator muscle and aponeurosis  Mullers muscles  orbicularis oculi  Lower lid retractors Rich blood supply to eyelids with multiple anastamoses  Lots of blood if eyelids cut Closure (protraction) (CN III) (sympathetics)
Herpes Zoster
  Usually affects V1, V2, or V3 Hutchinsons sign: affects V1 down to tip of nose o V2/3 & opposite side spared
Pathology Dacryoadenitis
Dacryocystitis
Nasolacrimal duct closure (e.g. congenital) mucopurlent tears (sac becomes infected)
Infection of nasolacrimal sac Rx with Abx surgery to drain abcess, make new opening 3
Conjunctiva
Filmy, transparent structure  Covers whole surface of eye except cornea  Bulbar, forniceal, palpebral sections Histology  Pseudostratified columnar epithelium o non-keratinized  Goblet cells secrete mucin (basal tearing)  Stroma (substantia propia) is fibrovascular tissue
o Has lymphocytes, plasma cells, lymphoid aggregates
Conjunctivitis
a.k.a. pinkeye Etiology: Can be bacterial, viral, allergic, toxic (can culture to help determine) Allergic Signs / Sx
 Itching  Tearing  Mild redness  Antihistamines  Mast cell stabilizers
Toxic
 Aminoglycosides  Preservatives  Anesthetic abuse
Infectious Bacterial
 Mucopurulent discharge ( if gonococcal)  Papillae, crusting  Topical antibiotic (FQ/ TMP).  Avoid gentamycin    
Viral
Tearing, redness   vision Preauricular adenopathy Follicles
Treatment
Cornea
Normally completely transparent (if dry) Made of several layers of stromal & epithelial cells  which lay in a clear, compact array  Endothelium, epithelium  keep stroma dry Creates refractive index (major focus device of eye)
Keratitis
  Inflammation of the cornea Can be infectious, immunologic, dry-eye related, toxic, or traumatic Pseudomonas keratitis Herpes simplex keratitis
Infectious keratitis
Dendritic pattern of scarring Complete involvement of stroma Treatable if you get it early; otherwise can resolve into a stromal scar (cloudy) Risk factors for infectious keratitis: dry, cant protect it, or cant feel it Exposure keratopathy (drugs, Bells palsy) dry eye Corneal hypesthesia / anesthesia (previous HSV keratitis, topical anesthetic abuse) Topical corticosteroids From contact lens overwear 4
LASIK
   Use one laser to create a corneal flap Use another laser to reshape corneal stroma Can use similar idea to treat stromal scarring, etc.
Uveal Tract
Uvea = pigmented portion of eye  Iris / ciliary body in front  Choroid in back
Iris
    Anterior border layer, stroma Sphincter muscle (parasymps: CN 3) Dilator muscle (sympathetics) Pigmented epithelium
Ciliary body
    Right next to iris Inner non-pigmented epithelium continuous with retina o Makes aqueous humor Outer pigmented epithelium o continuous with retinal pigment epithelium Zonular fibers (dotted lines) attached to ciliary bodies o Hold lens in place o Ciliary mm pull on lens (accommodation)
Picture: A, B: WBC in aqueous humor C: fibrin filling up chamber D: deposits on lens surface
CMV Retinitis
 Can be treated by ganciclovir intraocular drug delivery  drug-releasing implant 5
The Angle
 Formed by confluence of cornea, iris, ciliary body Functions: filtration, maintenance of intraocular pressure  Where aqueous fluid drains  Drainage: o From ciliary processes  o Exchanges with vitreous  o Through angle (lens / iris) into ant. Chamber o Out canal of Schlemm  o Through episcleral venous plexus
Glaucoma
    Characteristic loss of visual field (nasal, central-sparing, etc.) with specific changes in optic nerve appearance Often (but not always) associated with  eye pressure Angle can be open or closed Major cause of vision loss in AAs
Pathophysiology: not totally understood  IOP (function of rate of aqueous production, outflow, episcleral venous pressure)
   Aqueous production has diurnal fluctuation Outflow affected by blood, inflammatory cells, tumor cells, blockage of meshwork Episcleral venous pressure affected by A-V shunts, body position, head/neck diseases
Opthalmoscopic findings:
  See progressive optic disc cupping in glaucoma  C/D ratio with time (notch  cup  entire nerve affected)
Visual acuity findings: lose nasal vision, central often spared esp. at first Management of glaucoma: Pharmacologic
   Aqueous suppressants (-blockers, CAIs)  uveoscleral outflow (prostaglandin analogues) -2 agonists  
Laser
Argon laser trabeculoplasty Selective laser trabeculoplasty  
Surgery
Trabeculectomy Tube shunts
Angle Closure Glaucoma Associated with shape of eye, trauma, big cataracts, scarring Very treatable (laser iridotomy put a hole in it)
Lens
Anatomy: Histology: Function: Embryology: Crystalline lens with capsule, should be transparent, zonular fibers attach to ciliary processes Surrounded by true basement membrane (capsule) Refraction: ciliary body contracts  relaxes zonular fibers   lens AP Lens vesicle invaginates from surface ectoderm
Accommodation Ciliary body relaxed Zonular fibers tight Lens A-P diameter See far away things
Ciliary body contracted Zonular fibers loose Lens A-P diameter See close things
Cataracts
 #1 cause of vision loss worldwide Gross appearance  Lens with blobs in it (focal opacities)  Yellowing = normal aging change Risk Factors
 Age  UV light  Steroids  Trauma  Diabetes  FHx  Radiation  Uveitis  poor nutrition  smoking
Symptoms:
Vitreous Humor
   Gel-like substance (97% H2O, a little hyaluronic acid) Function: not well understood Adherent to retina at specific spots o (ora, over blood vessels, around optic nerve)
Vitreous Detachment
   Vitreous detaches from retina Little floaters (spots of light) result  pulling on retina from inside Retinal breaks can result (if retina stays adherent) 7
Sclera
    Collagen of variable diameter arranged in coarse bundles Extraocular muscles attach to sclera Traversed by nerves, blood vessels, o/w avascular o Nourished by episclera, uveal tract Continuous with dura around optic nerve
Scleritis
Inflammation of the sclera
Associated with RA / inflammatory conditions Can be thickened in idiopathic scleritis Inflammatory infiltrate on histology
Retina
Anatomy: Lots of Layers Inner retina Outer retina
     Inner limiting layer Nerve fiber layer Ganglion cell layer Inner plexiform layer Inner nuclear layer      Outer plexiform layer Outer nuclear layer External limiting membrane Photoreceptors (rods and cones) Retinal pigment epithelium
Blood supply
Note that branches of arterioles dont cross each other (horizontal raphe)
Light passes through lots of layers before hitting the rods & cones Fovea: area of mostly cones (and rods), inner retina pushed away Small area of best sight (central vision)
CMV retinitis in AIDS: mixed hemorrhage & necrosis with optic nerve infiltrations; edema too
Diabetic Retinopathy
This is non-proliferative: blood vessels leak, deposit in retina (hard exudate blood cells, plasma)
Choroidial Tumors
  Choroid is really vascular  tumors can seed here a lot Examples o Lump sticking into vitreous  metastatic breast cancer (L) o Choroidal melanoma (R)
Choroiditis
  Often goes with vasculitis Example: pseudomonas infection in AIDS (pic)
Coloboma
 Optic cup (becomes sclera) from prosencephalon  Forms from flat sheet invaginates   has to close fissure If the choroidal fissure doesnt close, get a coloboma  can look like a notch in iris, or be posterior imperfection in choroid
Optic Nerve
 about 3-4mm (15 nasal to fovea), usually  1.7mm vertical, 1.5mm horizontal No photoreceptors overlying disc (blind spot)  Central cup is free of nerve fibers Nerve fibers:  1.4 M in all, about as long as a nerve could be inside the head!
  Visual  lateral geniculate (LGN thalamus)  optic radiations  occipital ctx Pupillomotor  edinger-westphal nucleus
Blood supply: rich Outside supply from short posterior ciliary aa Inner supply from central retinal artery (what you see with opthalmoscope)
Here in Wegners granulomatosis (orbit filled with fluid) Also proptosis in this case
Papilledema: ICP disc edema Compressed nerve: swollen disc, congested Cant see vasculature, optic disc has lack of definition 9
Visual Fields
 Good functional test of optical nerve
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