"Hot seat and cold feet": navigating pressurised emergency eye care and exploring the role of OCT / OCTA in acute-onset retinal conditions mimicking optic neuropathy (2025)

Type of publication:

Conference abstract

Author(s):

*Nayak D.; *Kirtley F.; *Williams K.; *Husain S.;

Citation:

Eye (Basingstoke). Conference: The Royal College of Ophthalmologists Annual Congress 2025. Liverpool United Kingdom. 39 (pp 224-225), 2025. Date of Publication: 01 Jun 2025.

Abstract:

Introduction: Sudden loss of vision, especially when accompanied by loss of colour vision, a relative afferent pupillary defect (RAPD), and visual acuity dropping below 6/60, is an alarming symptom that often leads clinicians to suspect optic neuropathy, particularly conditions like Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy (AION) or Posterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy (PION). However, retinal conditions such as Paracentral Acute Middle Maculopathy (PAMM) and Acute Macular Neuroretinopathy (AMN), especially Type 2 AMN, can present with similar symptoms, causing diagnostic confusion. This poster explores classic findings on Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) and OCT Angiography (OCTA) along with visual fields that can aid in distinguishing between optic neuropathy and retinal diseases, guiding appropriate management and treatment. Method(s): The study included 10 patients with a mean age of 62 years, ranging from 47 to 75 years, with an equal gender distribution (5 males and 5 females). The average initial visual acuity was 5/60, ranging from 1/60 to 6/60. All patients presented with sudden vision loss, and 9 (90%) had a relative afferent pupillary defect (RAPD). Seven patients (70%) reported loss of colour vision, and many had a history of hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, or were on statins. The initial differential diagnosis included PION in 3 patients, AION in 4 patients, and demyelination in 3 patients. Some patients were treated with high-dose steroids (60 mg/day) for suspected(GCA) or as stroke cases due to vascular risk factors. OCT and OCTA findings revealed characteristic differences between the conditions. Result(s): The final diagnoses confirmed that 4 patients had PAMM, identified by hyperreflective lesions in the inner retinal layers on OCT, particularly in the parafoveal region. 3 patients were diagnosed with AMN, based on outer retinal hyperreflective lesions and macular ischemia identified on OCTA. The remaining 3 patients were diagnosed with optic neuropathy, 2 with PION and 1 with AION, based on OCT and OCTA findings, which did not show the characteristic retinal findings of PAMM or AMN. Regarding treatment, 5 patients were started on high-dose steroids (60 mg/day) for suspected GCA, but there was no significant improvement in the PAMM and AMN patients, where retinal ischaemia, rather than optic nerve ischemia, was the underlying issue. All patients were on statins, with 8 (80%) on increased doses due to hyperlipidaemia, and 7 (70%) were on antihypertensive therapy. Patients diagnosed with PAMM and AMN were managed conservatively with observation and treatment for underlying conditions, such as controlling hypertension and hyperlipidaemia, and did not require systemic steroids or biologics. Follow-up at 6 months showed that 6 out of 7 patients with PAMM and AMN had stable or slightly improved vision, with one patient showing slight worsening but remaining stable overall. Conclusion(s): OCT and OCTA imaging provide critical diagnostic information, revealing characteristic findings of retinal ischemia in PAMM and AMN. High-dose steroids, initially prescribed for suspected giant cell arteritis (GCA) or ischemic optic neuropathies, were ineffective for PAMM and AMN, as these conditions are driven by retinal ischemia rather than optic nerve ischemia. This underscores the importance of accurate diagnosis to avoid unnecessary treatments and potential harm, as steroids can worsen PAMM by increasing blood pressure. Patients with PAMM and AMN, when managed conservatively with observation and treatment for underlying conditions, demonstrated stable or improved visual outcomes. This contrasts with optic neuropathy patients who showed minimal improvement with steroids, highlighting the significance of early differentiation for optimal management. Additionally, this study emphasizes the cost-effectiveness of OCT and OCTA. These imaging techniques provide a less expensive, non-invasive alternative to MRI and CT scans, offering quicker and more accurate diagnoses. By reducing the need for more costly imaging and unnecessary treatments, OCT and OCTA contribute to both improved clinical outcomes and reduced healthcare costs. Therefore, their use in diagnosing acute onset retinal conditions mimicking optic neuropathy can significantly enhance patient care while ensuring cost savings for healthcare systems.

DOI: 10.1038/s41433-025-03831-0

Evaluation of the Impact of an Emergency Focused Ophthalmology Teaching Course on the Confidence of Emergency Doctors (2024)

Type of publication:

Conference abstract

Author(s):

*Mahon E.J.E.; *Ahnood D.

Citation:

Eye (Basingstoke). Conference: The Royal College of Ophthalmologists Annual Congress 2024. Belfast United Kingdom. 38 (pp 142), 2024. Date of Publication: 01 Nov 2024.

Abstract:

Introduction: It has been established that doctors in Accident and Emergency (A&E) departments have minimal confidence in managing ophthalmic presentations (Murray, P., et al. Eye 2016; https://doi.org/10.1038/eye.2016.99). The lack of confidence to accurately assess and manage patients presenting to A&E will likely have an impact on the quality of patient management and the quality of referrals made to eye casualties. We hypothesize that a teaching course covering core emergency ophthalmic examination and management skills will improve attendees' confidence in these areas. Method(s): Doctors currently or potentially working in A&E were invited to attend a teaching session where they would rotate between three stations which included slit lamp examination, simulation of foreign body removal and managing chemical eye injury. Teaching was delivered in small groups, with experienced staff leading the sessions. Pre-and post-course questionnaires included a 1-5 Likert scale self-assessment confidence rating on the three areas of teaching and overall confidence. Result(s): The course was attended by 13 doctors, with 46% of attendees being junior emergency specialty trainees or trainee equivalents, 38% were foundation doctors and 15% were A&E staff grade doctors equivalent to registrar. 92% of those who attended reported less than one hour of slit lamp examination time. Overall, the attendees' overall confidence went from 1.9 to 4.2 on the Likert scale. Conclusion(s): Our findings demonstrate a lack of confidence from the A&E doctors in assessing patients presenting with ophthalmic issues, with an overall confidence score of

DOI: 10.1038/s41433-024-03254-3

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Patient-Reported Importance of Functional Benefit in Geographic Atrophy (2025)

Type of publication:

Journal article

Author(s):

Dinah, Christiana; Enoch, Jamie; Ghulakhszian, Arevik; Sekhon, Mandeep; Salvatore, Serena; DeSalvo, Gabriella; Kumar, Praveen; Banerjee, Sanjiv; *Nayak, Devaki; Amoaku, Winfried; Shiew, Marianne; Osoba, Olayinka; Crabb, David P; Taylor, Deanna J.

Citation:

JAMA Ophthalmology. 2025 Nov 1;143(11):916-924.

Abstract:

Importance: Intravitreal complement inhibitors injections (IVCIs) slowed progression of geographic atrophy (GA) lesions in several registration phase 3 trials although without benefit for prespecified secondary functional vision outcomes. Patient acceptability of these therapies needs further exploration.

Objective: To quantify the acceptability of IVCI therapy to United Kingdom patients with GA, assuming vision outcome benefits are expected.

Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional study took place at 9 geographically dispersed UK National Health Service centers from April 2023 to April 2024 among 153 participants with treatment-naive GA in at least 1 eye.

Exposures: GA in at least 1 eye.

Main Outcomes and Measures: Main outcomes were (1) acceptability of IVCI therapy based on completion of validated acceptability questionnaire. Participants were provided with a treatment information leaflet coproduced by a patients with lived experience of GA to inform them about the risks and benefits of IVCI for GA, assuming there were vision outcome benefits to this treatment and (2) response to the EuroQol 5-dimension with a vision bolt-on questionnaire to assess general health and vision-related quality of life. Spearman rank correlations and chi2 tests were used to explore associations between acceptability levels and specific ocular and sociodemographic characteristics.

Results: A total of 153 participants were recruited (93 [60%] women; mean [SD] age, 82 [7]), 57 (38%) of whom had bilateral foveal involvement. Median (IQR) visual acuity with habitual correction in the better-seeing eye and in eyes where neither eye was better or worse was logMAR, 0.30 (0.14-0.54; approximate Snellen equivalent, 20/40) and 0.47 (0.14-0.84; approximate Snellen equivalent, 20/63), respectively. Among the 153 participants, 81 (53%; 95% CI, 45-61) reported IVCIs were very much or extremely acceptable under the theoretical scenarios provided. The proportion finding IVCIs acceptable rose to 82% (95% CI, 76-88) when including those who rated prospective treatment as moderately acceptable. Belief in the perceived effectiveness of the treatment (rho, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.40-0.63; P < .001) and confidence in their ability to attend the eye clinic regularly (rho, 0.51; 95% CI, 0.38-0.62; P < .001) correlated with overall acceptability.

Conclusions and Relevance: IVCI therapy for GA may be acceptable to most UK patients with GA under the assumption that there are vision outcome benefits to this treatment. While current treatments do not result in vision outcome benefits, perceived effectiveness by patients was associated with acceptability, emphasizing the desire to quantify vision functional benefit concomitant with anatomical slowing of progression.

DOI: 10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2025.3264

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Bilateral corneal endothelial decompensation following airbag-induced trauma (2025)

Type of publication:

Journal article

Author(s):

*Khaliq, Tayyib; *Pummiram, Srivarshini; *Iqbal, Naeem; *Jenyon, Tom.

Citation:

BMJ Case Reports. 18(1), 2025 Jan 27.

Abstract:

Approximately 3% of individuals in road traffic accidents suffer ocular injuries. We present a case of a man in his late 80s who presented with bilateral corneal decompensation following airbag deployment during a road traffic accident. Ocular examination revealed multilevel ocular injury with severe bilateral corneal oedema. This was managed with topical steroids, mydriatics and antibiotic therapy. At 1-month follow-up, the left eye had persistent corneal oedema. Specular microscopy was performed which confirmed endothelial cell loss making the patient a candidate for a corneal endothelial graft. We observed blunt trauma from airbag deployment causing endothelial cell loss and subsequent corneal decompensation. Our findings suggest that patients presenting to the emergency department with facial trauma from airbag injury should be referred for comprehensive ophthalmological assessment and that the reviewing ophthalmologist should have endothelial cell loss in mind during examination.

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Bilateral autologous penetrating keratoplasty following periorbital necrotising fasciitis (2024)

Type of publication:

Journal article

Author(s):

*Khan, Attam; *Baker, Diya; Husain, Syed; *Jenyon, Tom.

Citation:

BMJ Case Reports. 17(11), 2024 Nov 24.

Abstract:

The case report describes a rare instance of a man in his 70s with periorbital necrotising fasciitis (NF) who underwent bilateral autologous penetrating keratoplasty. NF is an acute infection that can lead to severe complications, including vision loss. The patient presented with severe facial swelling and necrosis of the right eyelid, treated with surgical debridement and antibiotics. Post-surgery, he lost vision in the right eye due to compressive optic neuropathy and developed exposure keratopathy, which was managed with tarsorrhaphy. His left eye had poor vision due to herpetic corneal scarring. He met the criteria for a bilateral autologous keratoplasty, transferring his healthy right cornea to his otherwise healthy left eye and the damaged left cornea to the right eye. The surgery was successful, and at 9 months post-operation, the patient achieved improved vision (6/36) and is awaiting contact lens fitting. The report highlights the advantages and considerations of autokeratoplasty over conventional corneal transplants.

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Experience of Developing Emergency Ophthalmic Skills in the General Emergency Department (2024)

Type of publication:

Service improvement case study

Author(s):

*Dr E. Mahon, *Mr T. Jenyon

Citation:

SaTH Improvement Hub, July 2024

SMART Aim:

Improve the confidence of ED doctors and AHPs (including ACPs, ENPs) in the assessment of patients presenting with eye conditions, their management within the department and the quality of referrals made the urgent eye clinic (UEC).

Link to PDF poster

Rationalisation of Storeroom 2 in the Cataract Suite, RSH (2022)

Type of publication:
Service improvement case study

Author(s):
*Sally Flukes (Ophthalmology Assistant ) and *Debbie Smith (Housekeeper)

Citation:
SaTH Improvement Hub, December 2022

SMART Aim:
To create a clutter free, safe and organised storeroom, which ensures the necessary equipment is stored in an appropriate place that makes it easily accessible for all colleagues, that meets the IPC standards as stated in the Trust policy by January 2023.

Link to PDF poster [no password required]

Rationalisation of a Cataract Emergency Theatre trolley, RSH (2022)

Type of publication:
Service improvement case study

Author(s):
*Sally Flukes (Ophthalmology Assistant)

Citation:
SaTH Improvement Hub, December 2022

SMART Aim:
Ensure Theatre Assistants have all the required items for the daily theatre list and stock levels are agreed by December 2022.

Link to PDF poster [no password required]

Deposition keratopathy (2022)

Type of publication:Journal article

Author(s):
Panthagani J.; MacDonald T.; *Bruynseels A.; Madathilethu S.C.; Jenyon T.

Citation:British Journal of Hospital Medicine. 83(7) (pp 1-13), 2022. Date of Publication: 02 Jul 2022.

Abstract:Material can be deposited in the cornea as a result of a wide range of systemic and ophthalmic diseases, as well as local and systemic therapies. Causes include local infection or trauma, systemic malignancy, a wide range of medications and a host of genetic and metabolic diseases. Some of these can be acutely life threatening, so generalists caring for both children and adults should have a basic awareness of the pattern and distribution of corneal deposits to facilitate timely diagnosis, investigation, management or onward referral to avoid significant morbidity or mortality. This article outlines causes of corneal deposits found in patients presenting to primary care, ophthalmic clinics or encountered on the wards to help generalists avoid missing serious pathology. It also provides insight into the natural history of underlying causative conditions and their possible treatments.