Visual disturbance

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Visual disturbances include sudden vision loss, blurred vision, double vision, floaters, flashing lights, and visual field deficits.

Differential Diagnosis

Sudden Painless Vision Loss

Sudden Painful Vision Loss

Gradual Vision Change

  • Cataracts
  • Open-angle glaucoma
  • Diabetic retinopathy
  • Macular degeneration

Double Vision (Diplopia)

Floaters/Flashes

  • Posterior vitreous detachment
  • Retinal detachment (photopsia with new floaters)
  • Vitreous hemorrhage

Evaluation

  • Visual acuity (each eye separately)
  • Pupil exam (RAPD suggests optic nerve pathology)
  • Extraocular movements
  • Visual fields by confrontation
  • Slit lamp exam and fundoscopy
  • IOP measurement if glaucoma suspected
  • ESR/CRP if temporal arteritis suspected (age >50 with headache)
  • CT/CTA for acute stroke with visual symptoms

Management

  • CRAO: ophthalmology emergency consultation, time-sensitive
  • Acute angle-closure: timolol, pilocarpine, acetazolamide, emergent ophthalmology
  • Temporal arteritis: high-dose IV methylprednisolone, do not delay for biopsy
  • Retinal detachment: urgent ophthalmology referral
  • Stroke: follow Stroke (main) protocol

Disposition

  • Admit for stroke, temporal arteritis, or endophthalmitis
  • Emergent ophthalmology for CRAO, acute angle-closure, retinal detachment
  • Urgent ophthalmology follow-up (24-48h) for CRVO, vitreous hemorrhage
  • Routine follow-up for stable floaters with normal exam

See Also

References

Authors: