A woman with diplopia needs your help. Can you identify the cause and include or exclude any red flags?
A woman with diplopia needs your help. Can you identify the cause and include or exclude any red flags?
This blog summarises the assessment and initial management of common ophthalmic emergency presentation such as Flashes, Floaters and Double Vision.
This session covers the initial assessment of eye and visual problems in the Emergency Department.
This module covers the initial assessment of eye and visual problems in the Emergency Department.
25 questions. 25 minutes. Test yourself against your colleagues!
A 55-year-old female presents to the ED with worsening diplopia for 2 days.
A 43-year-old female presents with blurred vision following a fall.
A 35-year-old woman attends the ED with right eye swelling and diplopia.
A 63-year-old female with no known medical history presents to the ED complaining of persistent double vision for the last four days.
A 54-year-old man presents with a sudden onset of double vision and a droopy eyelid.
A young man with intermittent headache, unilateral eye strain & blurry vision.
A 29-year-old lady presents with double vision
Cranial nerve injuries are important clinical signs, which alert the examiner to intracranial pathology. This session will look at the more common traumatic and medical causes of cranial nerve injury