retinal_detachment
Table of Contents
retinal detachment
introduction
- retinal detachment occurs by 3 main mechanisms:
- rhegmatogenous retinal detachment
- most common form
- break in the neuronal layer with resultant leakage of vitreous between the retinal layers causing separation of the layers
- traction retinal detachment
- vitreous gel becomes adherent to retina and pulls the layer off
- exudative (serous) retinal detachment
- retinal vessels exude serous fluid between the retinal layers
- aetiology:
clinical features
- new onset of floaters associated with flashing lights is highly suggestive of a retinal tear
- may have photopsia (flashes of light), visual field defect, floaters
- vision loss may be described as cloudy, irregular, or curtainlike
- if involves the macula, vision loss may be severe
- signs of pigment or tobacco dust in the vitreous (ie, Shafer sign), which is suggestive for a retinal tear in 70% of cases with no previous eye disease or surgery
- indirect fundoscopy is needed to reliably diagnose this condition
aetiology
- PH ocular trauma even months prior
- uveitis
- vitreous hemorrhage
- amblyopia
- glaucoma
- diabetic retinopathy
- FH (although most are sporadic cases with no FH)
- some medications may increase risk
- sildenafil
Mx of suspected cases
- nil orally
- if traumatic, protect the globe with metallic eye shield
- avoid any pressure on the globe and to limit activity to a minimum until further evaluation
- full eye exam including indirect fundoscopy
- if macula likely to be involved urgent ophthalmologist review within 24hrs
- avoid strenuous activity until seen by ophthalmologist
retinal_detachment.txt · Last modified: 2026/03/02 05:31 by gary1