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Red eye (medicine)

A red eye is an eye that appears red due to illness or injury. It is usually injection and prominence of the superficial blood vessels of the conjunctiva, which may be caused by disorders of these or adjacent structures. Conjunctivitis and subconjunctival hemorrhage are two of the less serious but more common causes.

Red eye
Subconjunctival hemorrhage causing red coloration as result of ruptured blood vessel in the eye
SpecialtyOphthalmology 

Management includes assessing whether emergency action (including referral) is needed, or whether treatment can be accomplished without additional resources.

Slit lamp examination is invaluable in diagnosis but initial assessment can be performed using a careful history, testing vision (visual acuity), and carrying out a penlight examination.

Diagnosis edit

 
Hyphaema – showing blood filling the anterior chamber, causing a horizontal fluid level

Particular signs and symptoms may indicate that the cause is serious and requires immediate attention.[1]

Seven such signs are:

The most useful is a smaller pupil in the red eye than the non-red eye (opposite eye) and sensitivity to bright light.[2]

Reduced visual acuity edit

A reduction in visual acuity in a 'red eye' is indicative of serious ocular disease,[3] such as keratitis, iridocyclitis, and glaucoma, and never occurs in simple conjunctivitis without accompanying corneal involvement.

Ciliary flush edit

Ciliary flush is usually present in eyes with corneal inflammation, iridocyclitis or acute glaucoma, though not simple conjunctivitis. A ciliary flush is a ring of red or violet spreading out from around the cornea of the eye.

Corneal abnormalities edit

The cornea is required to be transparent to transmit light to the retina. Because of injury, infection or inflammation, an area of opacity may develop which can be seen with a penlight or slit lamp. In rare instances, this opacity is congenital.[4] In some, there is a family history of corneal growth disorders which may be progressive with age. Much more commonly, misuse of contact lenses may be a precipitating factor. Whichever, it is always potentially serious and sometimes necessitates urgent treatment and corneal opacities are the fourth leading cause of blindness. Opacities may be keratic, that is, due to the deposition of inflammatory cells, hazy, usually from corneal edema, or they may be localized in the case of corneal ulcer or keratitis.
Corneal epithelial disruptions may be detected with fluorescein staining of the eye, and careful observation with cobalt-blue light. Corneal epithelial disruptions would stain green, which represents some injury of the corneal epithelium. These types of disruptions may be due to corneal inflammations or physical trauma to the cornea, such as a foreign body.

Pupillary abnormalities edit

In an eye with iridocyclitis, (inflammation of both the iris and ciliary body), the involved pupil will be smaller than the uninvolved, due to reflex muscle spasm of the iris sphincter muscle. Generally, conjunctivitis does not affect the pupils. With acute angle-closure glaucoma, the pupil is generally fixed in mid-position, oval, and responds sluggishly to light, if at all.

Shallow anterior chamber depth may indicate a predisposition to one form of glaucoma (narrow angle) but requires slit-lamp examination or other special techniques to determine it. In the presence of a "red eye", a shallow anterior chamber may indicate acute glaucoma, which requires immediate attention.

Abnormal intraocular pressure edit

Intraocular pressure should be measured as part of a routine eye examination. It is usually only elevated by iridocyclitis or acute-closure glaucoma, but not by relatively benign conditions. In iritis and traumatic perforating ocular injuries, the intraocular pressure is usually low.

Severe pain edit

Those with conjunctivitis may report mild irritation or scratchiness, but never extreme pain, which is an indicator of more serious disease such as keratitis, corneal ulceration, iridocyclitis, or acute glaucoma.

Differential diagnosis edit

Of the many causes, conjunctivitis is the most common.[1] Others include:

Usually nonurgent edit

  • airborne eye irritants
  • blepharitis[5] – a usually chronic inflammation of the eyelids with scaling, sometimes resolving spontaneously
  • drugs: medications or recreational drug use
  • dry eye syndrome – caused by either decreased tear production or increased tear film evaporation which may lead to irritation and redness [8]
     
    Acute glaucoma, angle closure type
  • subconjunctival hemorrhage[1] – a sometimes dramatic, but usually harmless, bleeding underneath the conjunctiva most often from spontaneous rupture of the small, fragile blood vessels, commonly from a cough or sneeze
  • inflamed pterygium[9] – a benign, triangular, horizontal growth of the conjunctiva, arising from the inner side, at the level of contact of the upper and lower eyelids, associated with exposure to sunlight, low humidity and dust. It may be more common in occupations such as farming and welding.
  • inflamed pinguecula[10] – a yellow-white deposit close to the junction between the cornea and sclera, on the conjunctiva. It is most prevalent in tropical climates with much UV exposure. Although harmless, it can occasionally become inflamed.
  • tiredness
  • episcleritis[11] – most often a mild, inflammatory disorder of the 'white' of the eye unassociated with eye complications in contrast to scleritis, and responding to topical medications such as anti-inflammatory drops.

Usually urgent edit

  • acute closed-angle glaucoma[12] – implies injury to the optic nerve with the potential for irreversible vision loss which may be permanent unless treated quickly, as a result of increased pressure within the eyeball. Not all forms of glaucoma are acute, and not all are associated with increased intraocular pressure.
  • eye injury
  • keratitis[12] – a potentially serious inflammation or injury to the cornea (window), often associated with significant pain, light intolerance, and deterioration in vision. Numerous causes include virus infection. Injury from contact lenses can lead to keratitis.
 
Eye with iritis showing ciliary flush
  • iritis[1] – together with the ciliary body and choroid, the iris makes up the uvea, part of the middle, pigmented, structures of the eye. Inflammation of this layer (uveitis) requires urgent control and is estimated to be responsible for 10% of blindness in the United States.
  • scleritis[13] – a serious inflammatory condition, often painful, that can result in permanent vision loss, and without an identifiable cause in half of those presenting with it. About 30–40% have an underlying systemic autoimmune condition.
  • tick-borne illnesses like Rocky Mountain spotted fever[14] – the eye is not primarily involved, but the presence of conjunctivitis, along with fever and rash, may help with the diagnosis in appropriate circumstances.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Cronau, H; Kankanala, RR; Mauger, T (Jan 15, 2010). "Diagnosis and management of red eye in primary care". American Family Physician. 81 (2): 137–44. PMID 20082509.
  2. ^ Narayana, S; McGee, S (November 2015). "Bedside Diagnosis of the 'Red Eye': A Systematic Review". The American Journal of Medicine. 128 (11): 1220–1224.e1. doi:10.1016/j.amjmed.2015.06.026. PMID 26169885.
  3. ^ Leibowitz HM (2000). "The red eye". N Engl J Med. 343 (5): 345–51. doi:10.1056/nejm200008033430507. PMID 10922425.
  4. ^ Rezende RA, Uchoa UB, Uchoa R, Rapuano CJ, Laibson PR, Cohen EJ (2004). "Congenital corneal opacities in a cornea referral practice". Cornea. 23 (6): 565–70. doi:10.1097/01.ico.0000126317.90271.d8. PMID 15256994. S2CID 9031282.
  5. ^ Jackson WB (April 2008). "Blepharitis: current strategies for diagnosis and management". Can J Ophthalmol. 43 (2): 170–79. doi:10.3129/i08-016. PMID 18347619.
  6. ^ Yazulla, S (September 2008). "Endocannabinoids in the retina: from marijuana to neuroprotection". Progress in Retinal and Eye Research. 27 (5): 501–26. doi:10.1016/j.preteyeres.2008.07.002. PMC 2584875. PMID 18725316.
  7. ^ American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR). Washington DC: American Psychiatric Association; 2000.
  8. ^ "Keratoconjunctivitis, Sicca". eMedicine. WebMD, Inc. January 27, 2010. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  9. ^ Bradley JC, Yang W, Bradley RH, Reid TW, Schwab IR (July 2010). "The science of pterygia". Br J Ophthalmol. 94 (7): 815–20. doi:10.1136/bjo.2008.151852. PMID 19515643. S2CID 15507689.
  10. ^ Sutphin, John, ed. 2007–2008 Basic and Clinical Science Course Section 8: External Disease and Cornea. American Academy Ophthalmology. p. 365. ISBN 1-56055-814-8.
  11. ^ Jabs DA, Mudun A, Dunn JP, Marsh MJ (October 2000). "Episcleritis and scleritis: clinical features and treatment results". Am J Ophthalmol. 130 (4): 469–76. doi:10.1016/S0002-9394(00)00710-8. PMID 11024419.
  12. ^ a b Dargin JM, Lowenstein RA (February 2008). "The painful eye". Emerg Med Clin North Am. 26 (1): 199–216. doi:10.1016/j.emc.2007.10.001. PMID 18249263.
  13. ^ Sims, J (December 2012). "Scleritis: presentations, disease associations and management". Postgrad Med J. 88 (1046): 713–18. doi:10.1136/postgradmedj-2011-130282. PMID 22977282. S2CID 37084152.
  14. ^ https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/rr/rr5504.pdf[bare URL PDF]

External links edit

medicine, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, understandable, experts, without, removing, technical, details, april, 2012, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, that, appears, illness, injury, usually, inje. This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details April 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message A red eye is an eye that appears red due to illness or injury It is usually injection and prominence of the superficial blood vessels of the conjunctiva which may be caused by disorders of these or adjacent structures Conjunctivitis and subconjunctival hemorrhage are two of the less serious but more common causes Red eyeSubconjunctival hemorrhage causing red coloration as result of ruptured blood vessel in the eyeSpecialtyOphthalmology Management includes assessing whether emergency action including referral is needed or whether treatment can be accomplished without additional resources Slit lamp examination is invaluable in diagnosis but initial assessment can be performed using a careful history testing vision visual acuity and carrying out a penlight examination Contents 1 Diagnosis 1 1 Reduced visual acuity 1 2 Ciliary flush 1 3 Corneal abnormalities 1 4 Pupillary abnormalities 1 5 Abnormal intraocular pressure 1 6 Severe pain 1 7 Differential diagnosis 1 7 1 Usually nonurgent 1 7 2 Usually urgent 2 See also 3 References 4 External linksDiagnosis edit nbsp Hyphaema showing blood filling the anterior chamber causing a horizontal fluid levelParticular signs and symptoms may indicate that the cause is serious and requires immediate attention 1 Seven such signs are Reduced visual acuity Ciliary flush circumcorneal injection Corneal abnormalities including edema or opacities corneal haze Corneal staining Pupil abormalities including abormal pupil size Abnormal intraocular pressure Severe painThe most useful is a smaller pupil in the red eye than the non red eye opposite eye and sensitivity to bright light 2 Reduced visual acuity edit A reduction in visual acuity in a red eye is indicative of serious ocular disease 3 such as keratitis iridocyclitis and glaucoma and never occurs in simple conjunctivitis without accompanying corneal involvement Ciliary flush edit Ciliary flush is usually present in eyes with corneal inflammation iridocyclitis or acute glaucoma though not simple conjunctivitis A ciliary flush is a ring of red or violet spreading out from around the cornea of the eye Corneal abnormalities edit The cornea is required to be transparent to transmit light to the retina Because of injury infection or inflammation an area of opacity may develop which can be seen with a penlight or slit lamp In rare instances this opacity is congenital 4 In some there is a family history of corneal growth disorders which may be progressive with age Much more commonly misuse of contact lenses may be a precipitating factor Whichever it is always potentially serious and sometimes necessitates urgent treatment and corneal opacities are the fourth leading cause of blindness Opacities may be keratic that is due to the deposition of inflammatory cells hazy usually from corneal edema or they may be localized in the case of corneal ulcer or keratitis Corneal epithelial disruptions may be detected with fluorescein staining of the eye and careful observation with cobalt blue light Corneal epithelial disruptions would stain green which represents some injury of the corneal epithelium These types of disruptions may be due to corneal inflammations or physical trauma to the cornea such as a foreign body Pupillary abnormalities edit In an eye with iridocyclitis inflammation of both the iris and ciliary body the involved pupil will be smaller than the uninvolved due to reflex muscle spasm of the iris sphincter muscle Generally conjunctivitis does not affect the pupils With acute angle closure glaucoma the pupil is generally fixed in mid position oval and responds sluggishly to light if at all Shallow anterior chamber depth may indicate a predisposition to one form of glaucoma narrow angle but requires slit lamp examination or other special techniques to determine it In the presence of a red eye a shallow anterior chamber may indicate acute glaucoma which requires immediate attention Abnormal intraocular pressure edit Intraocular pressure should be measured as part of a routine eye examination It is usually only elevated by iridocyclitis or acute closure glaucoma but not by relatively benign conditions In iritis and traumatic perforating ocular injuries the intraocular pressure is usually low Severe pain edit Those with conjunctivitis may report mild irritation or scratchiness but never extreme pain which is an indicator of more serious disease such as keratitis corneal ulceration iridocyclitis or acute glaucoma Differential diagnosis edit Of the many causes conjunctivitis is the most common 1 Others include Usually nonurgent edit airborne eye irritants blepharitis 5 a usually chronic inflammation of the eyelids with scaling sometimes resolving spontaneously drugs medications or recreational drug use Cannabis 6 7 dry eye syndrome caused by either decreased tear production or increased tear film evaporation which may lead to irritation and redness 8 nbsp Acute glaucoma angle closure type subconjunctival hemorrhage 1 a sometimes dramatic but usually harmless bleeding underneath the conjunctiva most often from spontaneous rupture of the small fragile blood vessels commonly from a cough or sneeze inflamed pterygium 9 a benign triangular horizontal growth of the conjunctiva arising from the inner side at the level of contact of the upper and lower eyelids associated with exposure to sunlight low humidity and dust It may be more common in occupations such as farming and welding inflamed pinguecula 10 a yellow white deposit close to the junction between the cornea and sclera on the conjunctiva It is most prevalent in tropical climates with much UV exposure Although harmless it can occasionally become inflamed tiredness episcleritis 11 most often a mild inflammatory disorder of the white of the eye unassociated with eye complications in contrast to scleritis and responding to topical medications such as anti inflammatory drops Usually urgent edit acute closed angle glaucoma 12 implies injury to the optic nerve with the potential for irreversible vision loss which may be permanent unless treated quickly as a result of increased pressure within the eyeball Not all forms of glaucoma are acute and not all are associated with increased intraocular pressure eye injury keratitis 12 a potentially serious inflammation or injury to the cornea window often associated with significant pain light intolerance and deterioration in vision Numerous causes include virus infection Injury from contact lenses can lead to keratitis nbsp Eye with iritis showing ciliary flushiritis 1 together with the ciliary body and choroid the iris makes up the uvea part of the middle pigmented structures of the eye Inflammation of this layer uveitis requires urgent control and is estimated to be responsible for 10 of blindness in the United States scleritis 13 a serious inflammatory condition often painful that can result in permanent vision loss and without an identifiable cause in half of those presenting with it About 30 40 have an underlying systemic autoimmune condition tick borne illnesses like Rocky Mountain spotted fever 14 the eye is not primarily involved but the presence of conjunctivitis along with fever and rash may help with the diagnosis in appropriate circumstances See also editList of eye diseases and disorders Ocular straylightReferences edit a b c d Cronau H Kankanala RR Mauger T Jan 15 2010 Diagnosis and management of red eye in primary care American Family Physician 81 2 137 44 PMID 20082509 Narayana S McGee S November 2015 Bedside Diagnosis of the Red Eye A Systematic Review The American Journal of Medicine 128 11 1220 1224 e1 doi 10 1016 j amjmed 2015 06 026 PMID 26169885 Leibowitz HM 2000 The red eye N Engl J Med 343 5 345 51 doi 10 1056 nejm200008033430507 PMID 10922425 Rezende RA Uchoa UB Uchoa R Rapuano CJ Laibson PR Cohen EJ 2004 Congenital corneal opacities in a cornea referral practice Cornea 23 6 565 70 doi 10 1097 01 ico 0000126317 90271 d8 PMID 15256994 S2CID 9031282 Jackson WB April 2008 Blepharitis current strategies for diagnosis and management Can J Ophthalmol 43 2 170 79 doi 10 3129 i08 016 PMID 18347619 Yazulla S September 2008 Endocannabinoids in the retina from marijuana to neuroprotection Progress in Retinal and Eye Research 27 5 501 26 doi 10 1016 j preteyeres 2008 07 002 PMC 2584875 PMID 18725316 American Psychiatric Association Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition Text Revision DSM IV TR Washington DC American Psychiatric Association 2000 Keratoconjunctivitis Sicca eMedicine WebMD Inc January 27 2010 Retrieved September 3 2010 Bradley JC Yang W Bradley RH Reid TW Schwab IR July 2010 The science of pterygia Br J Ophthalmol 94 7 815 20 doi 10 1136 bjo 2008 151852 PMID 19515643 S2CID 15507689 Sutphin John ed 2007 2008 Basic and Clinical Science Course Section 8 External Disease and Cornea American Academy Ophthalmology p 365 ISBN 1 56055 814 8 Jabs DA Mudun A Dunn JP Marsh MJ October 2000 Episcleritis and scleritis clinical features and treatment results Am J Ophthalmol 130 4 469 76 doi 10 1016 S0002 9394 00 00710 8 PMID 11024419 a b Dargin JM Lowenstein RA February 2008 The painful eye Emerg Med Clin North Am 26 1 199 216 doi 10 1016 j emc 2007 10 001 PMID 18249263 Sims J December 2012 Scleritis presentations disease associations and management Postgrad Med J 88 1046 713 18 doi 10 1136 postgradmedj 2011 130282 PMID 22977282 S2CID 37084152 https www cdc gov mmwr pdf rr rr5504 pdf bare URL PDF External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Red eye medicine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Red eye medicine amp oldid 1189855964, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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