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Case 2 - Early Ocular Intervention

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I've listed here some of the ocular injuries

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that require early intervention.

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And most of these are injuries that could

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lead to infection involving the globe.

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Those include things like open globe that we've mentioned

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or foreign bodies or severe corneal abrasions

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where we have full thickness corneal tears.

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These are some sometimes treated with aggressive

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antibiotics and that's usually in

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the form of drops on the eye.

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But sometimes if it's really severe and the

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patient does develop endophthalmitis,

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even with intravenous antibiotics or oral

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antibiotics. For some of the detachments, again,

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they're going to intervene early to

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reattach the choroid or the retina.

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So that way there's not permanent loss and permanent

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visual problems, and that might include scleral buckling

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or even taking portions of the vitreous out.

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The complications of ocular injury,

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as I mentioned, include phthisis bulbi.

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Phthisis bulbi is a shrunken,

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hyperdense globe that is the end product of trauma or

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endophthalmitis, or other penetrating injuries that can occur

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to the globe. Endophthalmitis, as I mentioned,

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occurs in 10% of open globes, but it can be catastrophic.

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And the problem with endophthalmitis

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is that if you have it in one globe,

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there seems to be this autoimmune reaction where you

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can have an inflammatory response to both globes.

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So even though one side is infected and involved with the

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injury, the body responds by attacking both globes,

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and that can lead to blindness in both eyes.

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So again,

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this is why it's so aggressively treated with antibiotics.

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And the typical pathogens, as one would expect,

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include staph. aureus from the superficial infections.

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You can also get hemorrhage that gums up the canals

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of schlem. What are the canals of shrimp?

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The canals of schlemm are in the posterior chamber,

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and that allows the flow of the fluid from the

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anterior chamber, posterior chamber into the vitreous.

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And when the canals of schlemm are gummed up by

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hemorrhage or infection, you can get glaucoma,

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which leads to high pressure in that posterior chamber,

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and that's effectively what we're seeing with glaucoma.

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Finally, we have an end product

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when you have involvement of the sclera membranes and

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when they get thinned, you can have staphyloma,

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which is elongation of the globe.

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And I think I have an example to show you of that.

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So here's an example of phthisis bulbi.

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Phthisis bulbi is a small, shrunken calcified globe,

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and it's usually secondary to trauma or infection.

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You can see initially the injury was down here

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to the bottom left, with the globe ruptured

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and the vitreous collapse, and you start to see

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some of this calcification that can occur.

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And here at the end point, you have small calcified globes

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seen on the CT scan and on the MRI scan. Again,

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phthisis bulbi and this calcified shrunken globe can

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lead from this right side that's involved to an

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attack by the body even onto the left side.

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So, notice that there's bilateral

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phthisis bulbi, and this wasn't because of an injury in the

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left eye but because of this autoimmune sort of attack.

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Let's look at staphyloma. So this is staphyloma.

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Staphyloma is thinning of the posterior membranes

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of the globe and usually it's a defect in the sclera.

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If we look at the ocular membranes in this globe, we

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can see them fairly well till about 3 o'clock and 9 o'clock.

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Unfortunately, there's this thinning of those

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ocular memories we should be seeing

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a little bit of a hyperdense periphery to the globe.

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Instead, on the right side,

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what you're seeing is the absence

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of that scleral hyperdensity,

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and the globe has become elongated in AP dimension.

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This left side also has some element of thinning when you

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compare it to the normal density

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that we should be seeing.

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So it's more affecting the right side than the left side.

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The most common cause of staphyloma and

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thinning posteriorly is actually axial myopia,

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far-sightedness. The globe elongates.

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But this is much more dramatic than that.

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You can see the MRI scan where we've kind of lost that same

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membrane back here, and the globe is elongated.

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So what we're dealing with is staphyloma, increased

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globe size, usually in AP dimension.

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Rarely you can have it affect the cornea upfront.

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We don't see that very often on our CT scan,

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and it's more commonly on the temporal side

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than it is on the medial or nasal side of the optic nerve.

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Leads to outward bulging, and as you can see,

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very unusual shape to the globe.

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So staphyloma is, again, most commonly seen in axial myopia

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but you can see it after endophthalmitis.

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You can see it after trauma.

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You can see it after with collagen vascular disease.

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As you can see here,

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patient with rheumatoid arthritis may have an

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anterior staphyloma affecting the cornea.

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So there are multiple etiologies for staphyloma.

Report

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Neuroradiology

Head and Neck

Emergency

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