What is your initial diagnosis?
Episcleritis
What is your initial diagnosis?
Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus
What is your initial diagnosis?
Recurrent corneal erosion
What is your initial lens selection?
OD -2.00 -1.25 x 180
OS -1.75 -2.75 x 160
You place a spherical corneal GP on your patient's right eye and see the following NaFl pattern: green at 6:00/12:00, black at 3:00/9:00. What is the orientation of the patient's astigmatism: WTR or ATR?
WTR
Which topical diagnostic test can help differentiate episcleritis from scleritis?
Phenylepherine 2.5% blanching test
The patient returns to your clinic after 1 week of resolution and complains of severe pain. What is this associated condition called?
Postherpetic neuralgia
What is your diagnosis most likely associated with?
Dry eye disease
Upon slit lamp examination, you see that your diagnostic lens is fluting on the nasal-inferior edge. When your patient looks up, the lens drops. Your current base curve is 8.7mm. What is your new base curve parameter that you would select: 8.8mm, 8.4mm, 8.7mm or 9.0mm?
8.4mm
7.89mm
Recurrent episcleritis is most commonly associated with which category of systemic conditions?
Autoimmune/connective tissue disease
(Ex: rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, ankylosing spondylitis, ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease.)
What are three differentiating factors between Herpes Simplex and Herpes Zoster?
1. Younger population (HSV) vs. older population (HZV)
2. True dendrite (HSV) vs. pseudodendrite (HZV)
3. Crossing of midline (HSV) vs. respecting midline (HZV)
What are two management techniques that can be done in office?
1. Epithelial debridement
2. Anterior stromal puncture
You had selected Precision 1 for Astigmatism for this patient, which has stabilization points at 8 and 4 o'clock. The patient is feeling the lens upon lens insertion. What other toric stabilization method may you choose for your patient?
Blink stabilization (J+J - Acuvue Lenses)
Based on your observation of the crystalline lens, what is your diagnosis? Name one reason why this would make cataract surgery difficult.
Pseudoexfoliation syndrome; poor dilation of the pupil, weak zonules
What is your treatment and follow-up plan?
Copious lubrication with PF AT every 2 hours in affected eye or OU
Oral NSAID (ex: Ibuprofen 200mg TID)
Refer to PCP for annual exam with bloodwork if this is not the first incidence of episcleritis to rule out autoimmune disorders
RTC in 2-3 weeks for anterior segment check and IOP check.
What is your follow-up recommendation prior to resolution, and what is your follow-up recommendation after resolution for this patient?
1-7 days; 3-6 months
What is your follow-up recommendation pre/post epithelial healthing?
1-2 days until epithelium heals, and then 1-3 months depending on severity and frequency of RCE
The soft lens has a single 6 o'clock toric mark. The diagnostic lens marking on eye are rotated 20 degrees nasal OD and 10 degrees temporal OS. What new lens power would you order and where would you expect the rotation marks on this new lens?
OD -2.00 -1.25 x 160, 20 degrees nasal
OS -1.75 -2.75 x 150, 10 degrees temporal
You order a spherical GP lens with an overall diameter of 9.8mm, a BCR of 7.85mm, center thickness 0.15mm, power -3.50D, secondary radius/width of 8.90/0.3mm, peripheral curve radius/width 10.9/0.3mm. What is the optical zone of this lens?
8.6mm
If the patient develops frequent episodes, what laboratory blood testing would you consider ordering?
ANA, RF
ESR/CRP
HLA-B27
CBC
What are the three oral treatment options for your diagnosis (please include exact dosing information)?
Famciclovir 500mg PO, TID x 7-10 days
Acyclovir 800mg PO, 5x/day x 7-10 days
Valacyclovir 1000mg PO, TID x 7-10 days
What are three treatment options for your diagnosis?
1. Cycloplegic drops
2. Antibiotic drop QID
3. Sodium chloride 5% QID
4. Bandage contact lens
5. Artificial tears/ointment 4-8x/day
Subepithelial infiltrate treated with topical steroid QID OD
42.50/44.75; -0.50/-2.75