Optic neuritis: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 13:51, 1 September 2015
Background
- Inflammatory, demyelinating condition of the optic nerve highly associated with MS
- 50% will go on to develop MS
- Presenting feature of MS in 15-20% of pts
Causes
- Idiopathic
- Multiple sclerosis
- Postchildhood vaccination
- Viral infection
- Measles, mumps, varicella, zoster, EBV
- Inflammation of structures contiguous with the optic nerve
- Meninges, orbit, sinuses
- Other infections
- Syphilis, Tuberculosis, Crypto
- Sarcoidosis, uveitis
- Temporal arteritis
- Vasculitides
- Ischemic optic neuropathy
- Hypertensive retinopathy, papilledema
- DM retinopathy
- Intracranial tumor, orbital tumor
- Glaucoma
Clinical Features
- Acute, usually monocular, vision loss occurring over days (occasionally over hours)
- May range from mildly reduced to no light perception whatsoever
- Retro-orbital headache
- Pain (esp w/ eye movement)
- Loss of color vision out of proportion to loss of visual acuity
Diagnosis
- Red desaturation test
- Have pt look with one eye at a dark red object
- Test the other eye to see if the object looks the same color
- Affected eye often will see the red object as pink or lighter red
- Ocular pressures
- Afferent Pupilary Defect (APD)
- Optic disc swelling and edema (papillitis)
- Elevated optic nerve disk on US = papilledema
- MRI of brain and orbits with gadolinium, plus fat suppression
- CBC
- CMP
- ESR, CRP
- RPR, FTABS
- CXR
Treatment
- Consult neuro and ophthalmology
- MRI to r/o or in MS
- Inpatient admission for IV methylprednisolone, 1 g qd x3 days
See Also
Source
Tintinalli
- Ergene et al. Adult Optic Neuritis. Mar 19 2014. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1217083-overview.
- Gerstenblith AT and Rabinowitz MP. The Wills Eye Manual: Office and Emergency Room Diagnosis and Treatment of Eye Disease. Lippincott Wolter (2012).
