Traumatic hyphema: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
Line 22: Line 22:


==Treatment==
==Treatment==
*Elevation of the head
#General
*Eye shield
#Elevation of the head
*Pharmacologic control of pain and emesis  
#Eye shield
*Bed rest
#Pharmacologic control of pain and emesis  
*No reading (accommodation may further stress injured blood vessels)
#Bed rest
*Cycloplegic
#No reading (accommodation may further stress injured blood vessels)
*For comfort if globe rupture has been excluded
#Cycloplegic
*Topical steroid  
#For comfort if globe rupture has been excluded
*Treat any underlying coagulopathy
##Topical steroid  
##Treat any underlying coagulopathy


==Disposition==
==Disposition==

Revision as of 08:35, 12 March 2011

Background

  • Typically casued by blunt trauma to the orbit
  • Main concern = rebleeding and elevated intraocular pressure
  • Worse around days 3-5
  • Can result in permanent vision loss

Clinical Features

  • Blood in the anterior chamber
  • Vision loss
  • Eye pain
  • Direct and consenual photophobia

Work-Up

  • Slit lamp
  • Check pressure once globe rupture is excluded!
  • Consider CT

DDx

  • Ruptured globe
  • Retinal detachment
  • Rebleeding

Treatment

  1. General
  2. Elevation of the head
  3. Eye shield
  4. Pharmacologic control of pain and emesis
  5. Bed rest
  6. No reading (accommodation may further stress injured blood vessels)
  7. Cycloplegic
  8. For comfort if globe rupture has been excluded
    1. Topical steroid
    2. Treat any underlying coagulopathy

Disposition

Inpatient:

  • suspected child abuse
  • bleeding dyscrasia
  • sickle hemoglobinopathy
  • intraocular hypertension on initial examination
  • delayed presentation
  • large hyphemas (>50% anterior chamber)

Prognosis

Grade Ant Chamber Filling
Nl Vision Prognosis
I <33% 90%
II 33-50% 70%
III >50% 50%
IV 100% 50%

Source

UpToDate