Yellow-white subepithelial lesion of abnormal collagen at the medial or temporal limbus due to UV exposure
What is a pinguecula?
Bright red blood under the conjunctiva associated with trauma, sneezing, coughing, or strain (weight lifting). Watch aspirin and anticoagulant use.
What is Subconjunctival hemorrhage?
What are small refractile lesions in the macula taken from the German word for geode?
What are drusen?
Thyroid Eye Disease mneumonic
What is No SPECS? No signs, Signs, Proptosis, EOM/Diplopia, Cornea, and Sight Loss.
What condition has ptosis, miosis, and anhydrosis
What is Horner's Syndrome?
Usually found in Oysters this ocular sign is epithelial cell proliferation happens in a secondary cataract.
What are Elschnig Pearls?
Gray-white discoloration of the macula due to photoreceptor outer segment disruption following blunt eye trauma.
What is Berlin's Edema?
Deposits of melanin on the corneal endothelium in a central vertical distribution.
What is Kruckenberg's Spindle?
What is the pneumonic to remember Syndromes with Keratoconus?
What is TDOME? Turner's, Downs, Osteogenesis Imperfecta, Marfan's, and Ehlers Dahlos.
What retinal condition includes peripapillary atrophy, “punched-out” chorioretinal lesions and disciform macular scarring in young and middle-aged adults?
What is Presumed Ocular Histoplasmosis (POHS)?
In Stage 3 of this condition sea-fan peripheral neovascularization forms growing in a circumferential pattern and a predilection for the superotemporal quadrant
What is Sickle Cell Retinopathy?
Retinal Hemorrhages in 85% of cases, associated with brain lesions and fractures of the ribs. Cerebral death in 20-30% of cases. A Form of Abusive Head Trauma.
What is Shaken Baby Syndrome?
Appears as dot like anterior subcapsular lens opacities due to lens epithelial cell ischemia and necrosis from high IOP.
What is Glaukomflecken?
What is the pneumonic for medications causing Vortex/Whorl Keratopathy?
What is CHIA-T? Chloroquine/Chlorpromazine, Hydroxychlorquine, Indomethacin, Amiodarone, and Tamoxifen?
IOL related inflammation with the classic triad of Uveitis, Glaucoma, and Hyphema.
What is UGH Syndrome?
Retinal disease causing decreased vision in young adulthood with an atrophic beaten-bronze appearance or yellow fleck-like deposits at the level of the RPE usually in a pisciform (fish-tail) configuration.
What is Stargardt Disease?
Multiple cotton wool spots and superficial hemorrhages around the optic nerve with decreased vision and a history of compression injury to chest, head or lower extremities.
What is Purtscher's Retinopathy?
Nodular corneal degeneration with several white elevated nummular opacities causing irregular astigmatism more common in females.
What is Salzmann's Nodular Degeneration?
What is the pneumonic for Non-Granulomatous Uveitis causes?
What is UCRAP? Ulcerative Colitis, Crone's Reactive Arthritis, Ankylosing Spondylitis, and psoriatic arthritis?
Uveitis causing condition has the classic triad of arthritis, urethritis and conjunctivitis.
What is Reiter's Syndrome?
Micro or Macrostriae of the flap after LASIK surgery, which may need repositioning.
What is Sands of Sahara?
Areas of choroidal and retinal rupture leaving bare sclera with history of high velocity (BB, bullet, or shrapnel) passing through orbit without contacting globe causing retinal shock waves.
What is Chorioretinitis Sclopeteria?
Choroidal cavernous hemangioma, facial nevus flammeus - port-wine stain, unilateral glaucoma
What is Sturge-Weber Syndrome?
What is the mneumonic for causes of angioid streaks?
What is PEPSI? Paget's, Ehlers Danlos, Pseudoxanthoma elasticum, sickle cell, and idiopathic?
Triad of external ophthalmoplegia, pigmentary retinopathy and cardiac conduction block during the first or second decade of life.
What is Kearns-Sayre Syndrome?