rao
Table of Contents
retinal artery occlusion (RAO)
introduction
- sudden onset of relatively painless monocular vision due to ischaemia/infarction of the retina resulting from occlusion of central retinal artery blood flow which comes from the ophthalmic artery which is the 1st intracranial branch of the internal carotid artery although 14% have a cilioretinal artery anatomy
- urgent Rx may restore some useful sight in ~20-30% of cases
- ~40% of cases are more distal occlusions of the branch retinal artery (BRAO)
- 5% are due to cilioretinal artery occlusions
- 1-2% develop bilateral occlusions
- mean age is 7th decade of life
- patients with RAO have a doubled risk of death within 9yrs cf age-matched population, and a life expectancy of 5.5yrs (cf 15yrs with age-matched controls)
- complete occlusion of central retinal artery causes irreversible infarction of the retina after 105 minutes
- whilst urgent Rx may be useful, the patient is at great risk of other pathology as these are usually the harbinger of further potentially life threatening events due to the underlying causes which should be investigated early
aetiology
- embolism (eg. AF, atherosclerotic carotid artery disease, endocarditis)
- angiospasm
- external occlusion of retinal artery
- prolonged direct pressure to the globe
- prolonged glaucoma
- 2/3rds have a PH hypertension
- 25% are diabetic
- 20% have > 60% carotid stenosis and this is the leading cause of those aged 40-60yrs
- inflammatory endarteritis (rare)
clinical features
- sudden onset of relatively painless monocular vision
- amaurosis fugax preceding persistent loss of vision suggests branch retinal artery occlusion (BRAO) or temporal arteritis
- afferent pupil defect
- fundoscopy with dilated pupil shows:
- tram tracking of vessels (interrupted lines)
- pale ground glass retina with cherry red macula (due to choroidal blood flow from ciliary vessels)
- emboli can be seen in 20%
emergency Rx
- contact ophthalmology reg ASAP
- consider massage of eye
- consider AC paracentesis
- Mx as per acute stroke / TIA
- FBE, U&E, LFTs, CRP, ESR, Coags, glucose, HbA1c, lipids
- consider thrombolysis but be aware of risk/benefits of doing so
- further Ix and manage underlying cause:
- ECG to exclude AF
- CT brain
- carotid doppler USS
- echocardiogram
- documentation that advised not to drive a car
- will need ophthalmologist follow up in 2 months
rao.txt · Last modified: 2018/06/12 06:59 by 127.0.0.1