Central retinal artery occlusion: Difference between revisions

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== Background ==
==Background==
*Acute interruption of blood flow to the retinal artery causing retinal ischemia
*A stroke equivalent — 15-25% of patients will have an acute stroke or TIA within 1 week<ref name="lee">Lee J, et al. Risk of stroke in patients hospitalized with central retinal artery occlusion. ''Stroke''. 2013;44(4):967-971. PMID 23399955.</ref>
*'''Ophthalmologic emergency''' — retinal tolerance for ischemia is approximately 90-100 minutes
*Permanent vision loss occurs in most patients despite treatment
*Average age: 60-65 years
*Most common cause: thromboembolism from carotid artery atherosclerosis or cardiac source


*Internal carotid -&gt; ophthalmic -&gt; central retinal artery  
==Etiology==
*Cherry red spot (fundoscopy)  
*Carotid artery atherosclerosis (most common)
**Macula is thinnest portion of retina
*Cardiac embolism (atrial fibrillation, valvular disease, endocarditis)
**Intact underlying choroidal circulation remains visible through this section
*Giant cell arteritis (GCA) — '''must be excluded in patients >50'''
***Macular area maintains normal color (red) versus surrounding ischemic, pale retina
*Hypercoagulable states
*Restoration of blood flow within 100min may lead to complete recovery
*Vasculitis
**Occlusion &gt;240min leads to irreversible damage
*Dissection of carotid or ophthalmic artery


=== Etiology  ===
==Clinical Features==
*Sudden, painless, monocular vision loss — often described as "lights went out"
*Typically develops over seconds
*Severe visual acuity loss (often counting fingers or light perception only)
*Relative afferent pupillary defect (APD / Marcus Gunn pupil)
*Fundoscopy:
**Pale/white retina with cherry-red spot at fovea (pathognomonic)
**Box-car segmentation of retinal vessels (intermittent blood flow)
**Retinal edema
*Branch RAO: visual field defect corresponding to affected branch


#Embolism
==Differential Diagnosis==
#Thrombosis
*[[Central retinal vein occlusion]] (hemorrhages on fundoscopy, less acute)
#[[Temporal Arteritis]]  
*[[Retinal detachment]]
#Vasculitis
*[[Optic neuritis]] (painful with eye movement)
#Sickle cell  
*[[Vitreous hemorrhage]]
#Trauma
*[[Giant cell arteritis]] (GCA) with anterior ischemic optic neuropathy
#Vasospasm (migraine)  
*[[Stroke (main)|Stroke]] affecting visual cortex
#Glaucoma
#Low retinal blood flow (carotid stenosis or hypotension)


== Clinical Features  ==
==Evaluation==
*'''ESR and CRP''' — '''stat''' to evaluate for giant cell arteritis (ESR >50 in GCA)
**If GCA suspected: start treatment immediately (see below)
*Fundoscopic exam — cherry-red spot diagnostic
*Intraocular pressure (IOP) — rule out [[Acute angle-closure glaucoma|acute glaucoma]]
*CT/CTA head and neck — evaluate for stroke, carotid stenosis
**May also obtain CTA to look for embolic source
*ECG — evaluate for atrial fibrillation
*Echocardiogram — evaluate for cardiac embolic source
*Labs: CBC, BMP, coagulation studies, lipid panel, HbA1c
*MRI with DWI — assess for concurrent acute stroke


#Sudden, painless, monocular vision loss
==Management==
##Often preceded by episodes of amaurosis fugax
*'''No proven treatment''' reliably restores vision; most interventions have limited evidence<ref name="mac">Mac Grory B, et al. Management of Central Retinal Artery Occlusion: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. ''Stroke''. 2021;52(6):e282-e294. PMID 33843236.</ref>
*Traditional temporizing measures (limited evidence):
**Ocular massage — intermittent digital pressure over closed eyelid (10-15 seconds on, 5 seconds off)
**Attempt to dislodge embolus distally
*Emergent ophthalmology consultation
*If GCA suspected (age >50, elevated ESR, headache, jaw claudication):
**Methylprednisolone 1 g IV daily x 3 days or Prednisone 1 mg/kg PO
**Do NOT wait for temporal artery biopsy to start treatment
*Stroke workup: same as [[TIA]] / [[Stroke (main)|stroke]]
**Dual antiplatelet therapy, statin, carotid imaging
*Consider emergent catheter-directed intra-arterial thrombolysis (tPA) at specialized centers if <6 hours (experimental)


== Diagnosis  ==
==Disposition==
*Admit for stroke workup (telemetry, vascular imaging, echocardiography)
*Emergent ophthalmology consultation
*If GCA suspected: admit for IV steroids and temporal artery biopsy within 1-2 weeks
*Treat as stroke equivalent with aggressive risk factor modification


#APD
==See Also==
#Fundoscopy
*[[Central retinal vein occlusion]]
##Pale retina, cherry red macula
*[[Retinal detachment]]
##Boxcar segmentation of blood column
*[[Stroke (main)]]
*[[Giant cell arteritis]]
*[[Acute angle-closure glaucoma]]


== DDx  ==
==References==
<references/>


#Amaurosis fugax
[[Category:Ophthalmology]]
#CRVO
[[Category:Neurology]]
#[[Temporal Arteritis]]
#Acute glaucoma
 
== Treatment  ==
 
#Consult ophtho
#No evidence supporting or refuting the following treatments:  
##Ocular massage
###Intermittent direct digital pressure applied through closed eyelid x 10-15 sec w/ rapid release to create pressure gradient to dislodge embolism
##Timolol ophthalmic 0.5%&nbsp; to decrease IOP<br>
##Increase PCO2 leading to retinal artery vasodilation/increased retinal blood flow <br>
###Rebreathe into paper bag x10 min q hr
###Inhale 95% O2 and 5% CO2 (Carbogen)<br>
##Anterior chamber paracentesis
###Causes acute drop in IOP to dislodge embolism
##Intraarterial fibrinolysis
##Acetazolamide, 500 mg IV or PO
##Mannitol
 
== Dispo  ==
 
*D/c w/ ophtho f/u in 1-4wk
 
== See Also  ==
 
*[[Acute Vision Loss (Noninflamed)]]
 
== Source  ==
 
*Tintinalli
*UpToDate
*Rosen's
 
<br>
 
[[Category:Ophtho]]

Latest revision as of 09:26, 22 March 2026

Background

  • Acute interruption of blood flow to the retinal artery causing retinal ischemia
  • A stroke equivalent — 15-25% of patients will have an acute stroke or TIA within 1 week[1]
  • Ophthalmologic emergency — retinal tolerance for ischemia is approximately 90-100 minutes
  • Permanent vision loss occurs in most patients despite treatment
  • Average age: 60-65 years
  • Most common cause: thromboembolism from carotid artery atherosclerosis or cardiac source

Etiology

  • Carotid artery atherosclerosis (most common)
  • Cardiac embolism (atrial fibrillation, valvular disease, endocarditis)
  • Giant cell arteritis (GCA) — must be excluded in patients >50
  • Hypercoagulable states
  • Vasculitis
  • Dissection of carotid or ophthalmic artery

Clinical Features

  • Sudden, painless, monocular vision loss — often described as "lights went out"
  • Typically develops over seconds
  • Severe visual acuity loss (often counting fingers or light perception only)
  • Relative afferent pupillary defect (APD / Marcus Gunn pupil)
  • Fundoscopy:
    • Pale/white retina with cherry-red spot at fovea (pathognomonic)
    • Box-car segmentation of retinal vessels (intermittent blood flow)
    • Retinal edema
  • Branch RAO: visual field defect corresponding to affected branch

Differential Diagnosis

Evaluation

  • ESR and CRPstat to evaluate for giant cell arteritis (ESR >50 in GCA)
    • If GCA suspected: start treatment immediately (see below)
  • Fundoscopic exam — cherry-red spot diagnostic
  • Intraocular pressure (IOP) — rule out acute glaucoma
  • CT/CTA head and neck — evaluate for stroke, carotid stenosis
    • May also obtain CTA to look for embolic source
  • ECG — evaluate for atrial fibrillation
  • Echocardiogram — evaluate for cardiac embolic source
  • Labs: CBC, BMP, coagulation studies, lipid panel, HbA1c
  • MRI with DWI — assess for concurrent acute stroke

Management

  • No proven treatment reliably restores vision; most interventions have limited evidence[2]
  • Traditional temporizing measures (limited evidence):
    • Ocular massage — intermittent digital pressure over closed eyelid (10-15 seconds on, 5 seconds off)
    • Attempt to dislodge embolus distally
  • Emergent ophthalmology consultation
  • If GCA suspected (age >50, elevated ESR, headache, jaw claudication):
    • Methylprednisolone 1 g IV daily x 3 days or Prednisone 1 mg/kg PO
    • Do NOT wait for temporal artery biopsy to start treatment
  • Stroke workup: same as TIA / stroke
    • Dual antiplatelet therapy, statin, carotid imaging
  • Consider emergent catheter-directed intra-arterial thrombolysis (tPA) at specialized centers if <6 hours (experimental)

Disposition

  • Admit for stroke workup (telemetry, vascular imaging, echocardiography)
  • Emergent ophthalmology consultation
  • If GCA suspected: admit for IV steroids and temporal artery biopsy within 1-2 weeks
  • Treat as stroke equivalent with aggressive risk factor modification

See Also

References

  1. Lee J, et al. Risk of stroke in patients hospitalized with central retinal artery occlusion. Stroke. 2013;44(4):967-971. PMID 23399955.
  2. Mac Grory B, et al. Management of Central Retinal Artery Occlusion: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association. Stroke. 2021;52(6):e282-e294. PMID 33843236.