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Sleuthing The Swollen Optic Disk

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Presentation on theme: "Sleuthing The Swollen Optic Disk"— Presentation transcript:

1 Sleuthing The Swollen Optic Disk
A non-specific Finding….. …..Warrants a Thorough Evaluation

2 Speaker Disclaimers Corporate Compensation: None
Investments/Interests: None

3

4 Unilateral or Bilateral?
Critical First Test: Unilateral or Bilateral? Unilateral  “optic neuropathy” Bilateral  “papilledema” Until proven otherwise

5 Malignant Hypertension

6 “Post-op Vision Loss, OU”

7

8 Critical 2nd Test: TRUE Edema vs PSEUDOedema

9 Check Blood Pressure Critical 3rd Test: Malignant Hypertension?
With or Without HTN retinopathy!

10 Critical 4th Test: REVIEW of SYSTEMS Health Hx. Medications Hx.
Symptoms

11 Polycythemia

12 Is there PAIN??? Ocular? Head?

13 B.P. spike with N.A.I.O.N. “HURTS behind my eye”

14 What Do The Visual Fields Look Like?
OD, OS, or OU? RNFL “bundle defect” Central or Ceco-central defect Enlarged Blindspot and overall depression

15 Causes of TRUE Disk Edema

16 #1 ISCHEMIA 1st Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy 2nd C.R.V.O. (venous stasis) 3rd Malignant Systemic Hypertension 4th Carotid-Cavernous Sinus Fistula (rare) 5th Diabetic Papillopathy (rare)

17 “Healthy 23 y.o. male”

18 #2: BLOCKAGE of RETROGRADE FLUID FLOW
1st Axonal and Intraneuronal C.S.F. - Raised intracranial pressure + Bilateral + “Papilledema” 2nd Venous Blood - C.R.V.O. 3rd Axonal and Intraneuronal C.S.F. - Optic Nerve Tumor - Orbital Mass Effect

19 #2: BLOCKAGE of RETROGRADE FLUID FLOW 4th Bilateral Venous Outflow - C
#2: BLOCKAGE of RETROGRADE FLUID FLOW 4th Bilateral Venous Outflow - C.C.S.F. - cerebral venous sinus thrombosis - right heart failure - pulmonary hypertension - sleep apnea - superior vena cava syndrome - jugular vein occlusion - dural fistula

20 1st Papillitis 1st Anterior Optic Neuritis
#3: INFLAMMATION 1st Papillitis 1st Anterior Optic Neuritis

21 #4: OPTIC DISK TRAUMA Optic Nerve Contusion

22 #5: TOXICITY and NUTRITIONAL NEUROPATHY
“Moonshine Retinopathy” Drug Addiction Annorrhexia Bulimia

23 #6: DRAMATIC I.O.P. CHANGE Acute Glaucoma Ocular Hypotony

24 Non-Edematous (“without fluid”) Disk Elevation & Thickening
Causes of Non-Edematous (“without fluid”) Disk Elevation & Thickening

25 #1: OPTIC DISK IRREGULARITIES
#1) Disk Drusen #2) Crowded Disk #3) Tilted Disk #4) Myelinated Nerve Fibers

26 #2: LEBER’S HEREDITARY OPTIC NEUROPATHY
Suspect in any case of BILATERAL “idiopathic” optic neuropathy Inherited mitochondrial disease Passed on by Mom Affects both genders Affects all ages Diagnosis: Genetic Testing

27 #3: OPTIC DISK INFILTRATION
#1) Metastasis - breast - lung #2) Primary Tumor #3) Leukemia #4) Lymphoma #5) Sarcoidosis

28 Key Findings TRUE DISK EDEMA

29 Look For: Elevation Peripapillary Retinal Sheen
Circumferential Retinal Folds Radiating Retinal Folds Whitening of the peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer

30

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32 Retinal Folds?

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35 Blurry Disk Margins SmallLarge Vessel Obscuration Venous Bloating & Tortuosity Peripapillary/Papillary Hemorrhages Juxtapapillary Exudates

36 Fluid Pockets/ “Bags” on OCT
Leakage (not “late staining”) on Fluorescein Angiography

37 TRUE Disk Edema….. Now What????

38 Or Is it Optic Neuropathy ???????
Is it Papilledema Or Is it Optic Neuropathy ???????

39 LATERALITY Unilateral vs Bilateral vs Bilateral, Asymmetric

40 VISUAL ACUITY Reduced “early on…” vs Not reduced until late

41 COLOR VISION Reduced “early on….” vs Not reduced until late

42 CONTRAST SENSITIVITY Grossly Reduced vs NOT Reduced

43 VISUAL FIELDS OPTIC NEUROPATHY PAPILLEDEMA Central depression
Macular bundle depression Arcuate pattern depression Altitudinal pattern depression PAPILLEDEMA Enlarged blindspots Scattered nasal field defects Overall peripheral depression

44 T.V.O. ASSESSMENT Transient Visual Obscurations
One eye? Both eyes? “How do changes in posture affect your vision?” “What if you bend over?”

45 RAISED INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE
SYNDROME

46 1) Look carefully at BOTH disks!!!
Papilledema almost always present Spontaneous Venous Pulsation almost always absent

47 2) Look carefully at SYMPTOMS!
Headache Transient Visual Fluctuations Pulsatile Tinnitus Nausea Vomiting Horizontal Diplopia—worse at Far Focal neurologic symptoms elsewhere in the body

48 Compare that to: EDEMATOUS OPTIC NEUROPATHY
Symptoms primarily ocular/visual Usually Hx of underlying disease May be “classic symptoms” of that associated disease Cranial arteritis Lyme disease Cat scratch disease

49

50 You now DO suspect Papilledema….what next?
Preferred Practice Patterns advise: IMAGING IS MANDATORY!

51 CT of Head (advisable) Large masses
DETECTS: Large masses Intracranial hemorrhaging (fresh blood) Hydrocephalus

52 …….But I still think my patient has papilledema…….Now What?
Uh, Oh. CT is “WNL” …….But I still think my patient has papilledema…….Now What?

53 MRI of BRAIN with contrast
DETECTS: Intracranial masses Infiltrates Cerebral venous thrombosis (+/-) Meningeal pathologies

54 CT and MRI are Normal but Papilledema still suspected?
LUMBAR PUNCTURE With CSF opening pressure Normal < 200mm Questionable mm Elevated > 250mm With CSF laboratory analysis Normal = idiopathic intracranial hypertension likely Abnormal: chronic meningitis, spinal cord tumor, etc.

55 Diagnosis still in Doubt?
R/O VENOUS SINUS THROMBOSIS MRV of HEAD and NECK

56 Diagnosis still in Doubt?
Etiology must be a systemic venous return issue…… Extensive cardiovascular workup indicated “Emphasis on venous return pathologies”

57


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