This blog summarises the assessment and initial management of common ophthalmic emergency presentation such as Sudden Vision Loss.
This blog summarises the assessment and initial management of common ophthalmic emergency presentation such as Sudden Vision Loss.
This blog summarises the assessment and initial management of common ophthalmic emergency presentation such as Swollen Lids and Ocular Trauma.
This blog summarises the assessment and initial management of common ophthalmic emergency presentation such as the acute red eye.
25 questions. 25 minutes. Test yourself against your colleagues!
A 40-year-old female attends ED with a painful eye with worsening vision.
A 30-year-old lady presents to the ED feeling “numb from the waist down”.
Most external eye infections pose little risk to life or vision. Orbital cellulitis is the exception
This module will look at the assessment and management of infections affecting the external eye and the lacrimal apparatus.
A 72-year-old male presents with distressing peri-orbital pain after pupil dilation.
A 28-year-old male presents with an acutely red eye and reduced visual acuity.
A 34-year-old woman presents with a worsening vision and pain on eye movement.
This session identifies the clinical features of the different types of conjunctivitis and describes appropriate investigation and management.
This module identifies the clinical features of the different types of conjunctivitis and describes appropriate investigation and management.
Doctor, why is my vision worse after surgery?
A 15-year-old male presents to the ED complaining of blurred vision in the right eye, floaters, and mild headache.
A 36-year-old male presents to the ED with left eye pain and ‘redness’ for one day, especially uncomfortable in bright light. He also reports blurred vision and floaters.
A 35-year-old woman attends the ED with right eye swelling and diplopia.
In this episode we discuss Paediatric Cardiology, Gender identity in ED, Traumatic and Medical Ophthalmology
An elderly woman presents with bilateral visual loss progressively worsening over the previous four days
A 28-year-old female presents to the emergency department with a 3-day history of a red, painful and watery right eye.