What are the causes and associations of acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis?;"Causes • Enterovirus type 70 • Coxsackie A24 • Adenovirus type 11 Associations • Follicular conjunctivitis • Subconjunctival hemorrhage" What is the percentage of patients with conjunctival lymphoid tumor that have extraocular lymphoma?;"• 20% • Non-Hodgkin's B cell • Most common in > 50 years old or immunocompromised" What is the inheritance pattern and extraocular malignancies associated with ataxia telangiectasia?;"• Autosomal recessive • Increased risk of breast cancer and T cell leukemia" What biomolecules make up the corneal stroma?;"• Type 1, 5, and 6 collagen • Proteoglycans (dermatan and keratan sulfate) in a higher ratio posterior than anterior stroma" What is the most common branch of cranial nerve V1 involved in herpes zoster infection?;"• V1 frontal branch" What are the causes of enlarged and prominent corneal nerves?;"○ Enlarged corneal nerves • Multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) type 2B • Medullary carcinoma of thyroid gland, pehochromocytoma, mucosal neuromas, marfanoid habitus • Phytanic acid storage disorder (Refsum disease) • Leprosy (Hansen disease) • Familial dysautonomia (Riley-Day syndrome) • Neurofibromatosis • Acanthamoeba perineuritis ○ Prominent corneal nerve • Keratoconus • Ichthyosis • Fuch’s corneal dystrophy • Corneal edema • Congenital glaucoma" Where do lateral eyelid lymphatics drain?;"• Preauricular lymph nodes" Where do medial eyelid and conjunctiva lymphatics drain?;"• Submandibular and submental lymph nodes" What is congenital hereditary stromal dystrophy?;"• Rare • Present at birth • Bilateral opacification of central stroma with white flakes • Clear peripherally • Moderate to severe visual loss • Non progressive or slowly progressive • Mutation in decorin gene on chromosome 12""• Rare • Present at birth • Bilateral opacification of central stroma with white flakes • Clear peripherally • Moderate to severe visual loss • Non progressive or slowly progressive • Mutation in decorin gene on chromosome 12" What is the mutation in macular corneal dystrophy?;"• Carbohydrate sulfotransferase 6" What is gelatinous corneal dystrophy?;"• Autosomal recessive • Mutation in tumor associated calcium signal transducer 2 • Initially resembles band keratopathy • Eventually lesions resemble ""mulberries"" • 100% recurrence rate after PKP" What dystrophies do mutations in TGF beta-1 (5q31) cause?;"• Lattice type 1 • Avellino/granular corneal dystrophy 2 • Reis-Bucklers/Thiel Benke • Granular corneal dystrophy 1 “LARGe” 5 letters, chromosome 5" What is the water content of the cornea?;"• 78% • Maintained by intact epithelium and endothelium (water pump of endothelial cells)" What is hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (Rendu-Osler-Weber disease)?;"• Autosomal dominant • Telangiectasias of conjunctiva, nasopharynx, GI, brain, etc • Abnormal blood vessels in adulthood results in bleeding → iron deficiency anemia • Fragile vessels in conjunctiva can bleed with minimal eye rubbing" What are the surgical risk factors in posterior polar cataract and Mittendorf dot cataract?;"• Risk of posterior capsule breaks • Avoid hydrodissection, instead perform hydrodelineation" What does tear osmolarity measure and how is it affected in dry eye?;"• Measures aqueous tear deficiency • Elevated in aqueous tear deficiency (>300 mOsm/L) • This test is not necessarily diagnostic of dry eye in isolation • There can be variable results at the same appointment • Results should be considered in context of clinical signs" What is tear lactoferrin?;"• Made by acinar cells of lacrimal gland • Binds iron, prevents bacterial growth • indirect measure of lacrimal gland function • helps differentiate aqueous tear deficiency from evaporative dry eye • This test is not necessarily diagnostic of dry eye in isolation • There can be variable results at the same appointment • Results should be considered in context of clinical signs" How is tear IgE affected in allergic conjunctivitis?;"• Elevated in allergic conjunctivitis" What is tear MMP-9 and how is it affected in dry eye?;"• Inflammatory cytokine • Released by epithelial cells in response to stress (blepharitis) • Elevated MMP-9 suggest evaporative dry eye" What is the treatment for a gonococcal infection?;"• One time intramuscular ceftriaxone 1 g Or • One time spectinomycin intramuscular Or • Oral fluoroquinolone 5-7 days Plus • Eye lavage every hour Plus • Treatment for chlamydia (high rate of concurrence) – azithromycin or doxycycline" What is the treatment for chlamydia?;"• Azithromycin 1g (single dose) Or • Doxycycline 100 mg BID 7 days Or • Erythromycin 500 mg QID x 7 days" What is the basic secretion test?;"Measures basal secretion: • Topical anesthetic • Blot off excess fluid • Check at 5 minutes • <3 mm = abnormal • 3-10 mm = equivocal" What is the Schirmer I test?;"• Do NOT use topical anesthetic • Measures basic and reflex tears • Check at 5 minutes • <5.5mm at 5 mins = abnormal • >15 mm at 5 mins = epiphora" What is the Schirmer II test?;"• Uses topical anesthetic • Measures reflex secretion • Nasal mucosa stimulated • Check at 2 minutes • <15 mm at 2 mins = abnormal" What are the complications of using Valtrex in immunocompromised patients?;"• Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura • Hemolytic uremia syndrome" What are the signs of cornealc edema?;"• Waite-Beetham lines = faint deep stromal wrinkles, early sign • D-folds = stroma increased thickness 10% or more" What is Thiel Benke?;"• Autosomal dominant • TGFB1 gene mutation • Affects Bowman layer • Distinguish from Reis Bucklers via electron microscopy, shows ""curly fibers"" in Thiel-Behnke only • Bowman's layer is replaced by fibrocellular material, forms ""saw-tooth"" pattern • Clinically = honeycomb opacities at Bowman level, spare peripheral cornea • Recurrent erosions are common - less frequent and less severe than Reis-Buckler" Which protein does TGFB1 gene code for and which chromosome is it located on?;"• Keratoepithelin • Chromosome 5q31" What is Mikulicz syndrome?;"• Lacrimal gland enlargement + Salivary gland enlargement + Keratoconjunctivitis sicca" What is Wilson’s disease?;"• Autosomal recessive • Kayser-Fleischer ring – brown discoloration of peripheral descemet's membrane • Sunflower cataract - copper in anterior capsule in petaloid configuration • Decreased serum ceruloplasmin • Treatment with systemic D-penicillamine (binds copper) can lead to disappearance of K-F ring" What causes a sunflower cataract?;"• Copper in anterior capsule in petaloid configuration • Seen in Wilson’s disease" What is Cogan’s syndrome?;"• Autoimmune disease • Hearing loss + vertigo + stromal keratitis • Young adults w/recent UR • Associated with polyarteritis nodosa • Treatment - topical steroids for keratitis and oral steroids for hearing loss • If not treated, causes deafness • Rule out syphilis before any steroids" What is megalocornea?;"• Non-progressive • Bilateral • X-linked recessive • Normal histo • Horizontal corneal diameters 13 mm or more • Can have glaucoma (not congenital glaucoma) • IOP normal • Normal axial length, corneal thickness and contour • Deep AC • Associated with Marfan syndrome" What are the causes of neurotrophic ulcers?;"• Topical medications: beta blockers, CAIs, NSAIDs, trifluridine • Topical anesthetic abuse • Corneal HSV/VZV – zoster with patchy hypoesthesia • BAK preservative • CN V palsy (surgery for trigeminal neuralgia) - diffuse hypoesthesia • Diabetes • Chronic contact lens wear • LASIK • Familial dysautonomia (""Riley-Day syndrome"") • Leprosy" What is the triad for congenital glaucoma?;"• Triad: photophobia, tearing, blepharospasm • Increased horizontal diameters (normal for newborns 9.5-10.5 mm)" What are ideal methods to obtain corneal bacterial cultures?;"• Best by platinum Kimura spatula (heats and cools rapidly) • Also, metal blade, calcium alginate, Dacron swab" What are the least ideal methods to obtain corneal bacterial cultures?;"• Cotton swabs, can inhibit growth" What is the best way to obtain corneal viral cultures?;"• Dacron swab • Calcium in calcium alginate and wood from cotton swab can inhibit viral recovery" What is the best way to obtain anaerobic bacteria culture?;"• Thioglycolate broth" What is the best way to obtain aerobic bacteria culture?;"• Blood agar • Chocolate agar • Thioglycollate broth (also for anaerobic bacteria)" What is the best way to culture Neisseria species?;"• Thayer-Martin agar" What is the best way to culture fungi?;"• Sabouraud's agar" What is the best way to culture mycobacteria and Nocardia species?;"• Lowenstein Jensen" What is the best way to culture non-tuberculous mycobacteria?;"• Middlebrook agar" Subepithelial infiltrates are associated with which viral conjunctivitis?;"• Adenovirus EKC • 1-3 weeks after acute infection • WBCs + immune complex deposits • Treat with topical steroids." What causes toxic ulcerative keratopathy?;"• Caused by topically applied medications. Due to impaired epithelial wound healing" What is vernal keratoconjunctivitis?;"• Giant papillary conjunctivitis • Horner-Trantas dots = degenerated eosinophils • Shield ulcer" What is scleromalacia perforans?;"• Painless • Minimal inflammation • Necrotizing scleritis • Requires systemic workup for underlying autoimmune disease • Associated with rheumatoid arthritis • Positive for rheumatoid factor (autoantibody against IgG) • Underlying autoimmune conditions are associated with significant mortality if not treated appropriately • Rarely spontaneous perforation • Associated with globe rupture after minimal trauma" What bacteria does cefazolin cover?;"• More gram positive coverage" How do acidic chemicals cause ocular damage?;"• Denature and precipitate proteins in the tissues they contact • Precipitated proteins then serve as type of barrier to further damage by acidic chemical • Ocular tissues have higher buffering capacity for acidic compounds" How do alkali chemicals cause ocular damage?;"• Saponification of fatty acids in cell membranes (corneal epithelium) leads to cellular disruption • After corneal epithelium is destroyed, alkali chemical easily penetrates and destroys collagen fibrils and proteoglycans in the stroma • Very strong alkali chemicals can eat through cornea and enter anterior chamber • High incidence of severe glaucoma" What is Lattice Corneal Dystrophy 1 (LCD1)?;"• Autosomal dominant • Mutation in TGFBI, 5q31 • Gene defect causes abnormal protein folding causing amyloid accumulation • Localized corneal amyloidosis • Stains with Congo red • Metachromasia if stained with crystal violet • Amyloid deposits, apple-green in color under polarized light, ""birefringence"" • ""Dichroism"" = deposits alternate in color from red to green when viewed through rotating polarizing filter • Glasslike branching lines in the stroma • Deposits start in anterior cornea (subepithelial and anterior stroma) then progresses posteriorly • Starts centrally and progresses centrifugally" Which corneal dystrophies have the highest rates of recurrence in corneal transplant patients?;"• Most common – Reis-Bucklers • 2nd most common – Lattice • 3rd most common – Granular • Least common - Macular" What is the age of presentation of the corneal stromal dystrophies?;"• Youngest – macular • 2nd youngest – lattice • Oldest - granular dystrophy" What is Meretoja syndrome/LCD2?;"• Familial amyloidosis • Finnish type/gelsolin type • Mutation in 9q32-34/gelsolin gene • Corneal-lattice like changes with systemic amyloidosis • Characteristic features = masked facies, dermatochalasis, lagophthalmos, pendulous ears, dry/lax skin, cranial and peripheral nerve palsies, orthostatic hypotension, cardiac conduction abnormalities, problems with perspiration • Increased incidence of glaucoma (NOT a feature of LCD1) • NOT a dystrophy" What is a Gundersen flap?;"• Incising and then rotating piece of conjunctiva so it covers cornea • Indicated if persistent epi defect in a poor visual potential eye" What are posterior polar cataracts/Mittendorf dots?;"• Autosomal dominant • Usually bilateral • Develop early in life • Remnant of fetal hyaloid artery • Location usually center of lens - vision worse under photopic conditions (bright light); better under scotopic conditions (dim light) • Fused with posterior capsule • Surgery is associated with increased risk of posterior capsule breaks, vitreous loss, and other associated complications • Avoid hydrodissection, instead do hydrodelineation to avoid disruption of cataract and posterior capsule adhesions • Strategies ""inside-out"" and ""reverse flower bloom"" techniques are used" What are conjunctival nevi?;"• Present in 1st or 2nd decade of life • Color from light brown to amelanotic • 50% have epithelial inclusion cysts • Limbal nevi tend to be flat, while nevi of bulbar conjunctiva, plica semilunaris, and caruncle tend to be raised • Observation generally recommended • Excision is recommended is growth occurs • ALWAYS biopsy if lesions are on palpebral conjunctiva, tarsal conjunctiva, caruncle, plica semilunaris, or fornix" What is complexion-associated melanosis (racial melanosis or benign acquired melanosis)?;"• Darker complexions • More noticeable near limbus • Bilateral and symmetric • Occur in adulthood • Does not typically lead to malignant transformation" What is primary acquired melanosis (PAM)?;"• Unilateral & asymmetric • Non cystic • Most common in light-pigmented and middle aged patients • Premalignant; progress to melanoma 30-50% • Risk factors for progression: 3 clock hours of conjunctival pigmentation, involve caruncle, plica, fornix, or palpebral conjunctiva • Indication for removal >2 clock hours involvement • Cellular atypia is most important factor for predicting progression • Without atypia, rarely turns malignant → follow q6-12 months • PAM with mild atypia → follow closely • PAM with moderate to severe atypia → high risk of progression → remove entire pigmented conjunctival lesion; if too large to remove, then topical MMC" What is conjunctival melanoma?;"• Occurs in middle to late adulthood • Nodular and vascular • Mortality 25% • Common in bulbar conjunctiva or limbus • 25% are amelanotic • >50% rate of recurrence • Origin from PAM (70%), nevus (5%), de novo (25%) • Excision of lesion include 2 mm uninvolved margin, avoid touching pigmented area of lesion to prevent seeding" What factors suggest poor prognosis for conjunctival melanoma?;"• Palpebral/caruncle/lid margin/fornix • Invasion to deeper tissues • >1.8 mm thickness • Pagetoid or full thickness intraepithelial spread • Lymphatic invasion • Mixed cell type • De novo origin (not starting out as PAM or nevus) • Tumors NOT involving limbus • Residual tumor at surgical margin after excision" How to excise pigmented conjunctival lesions?;"• Include 2 mm uninvolved margin • Avoid touching pigmented area of lesion to prevent seeding • Avoid incisional biopsies because may spread the tumor" What is the frequency of eyelashes/cilia replacement?;"• Naturally: q3-5 months • Cut: 2 weeks • Pulled out: 2 months • Twice as many cilia along upper lid compared to lower lid" What are sessile papillomas of conjunctiva?;"• Most common at the limbus • Flat with corkscrew vessels • Appearance of strawberry • When associated w/HPV 16, 18 or 33, likely to be dysplastic or carcinomatous • Signs of dysplasia = leukoplakia and symblepharon" What are pedunculated conjunctival papilloma?;"• Associated with HPV 6, 11 (children); HPV 16 (adults) • Fibrovascular core and grow out from surface • Most common from inferior fornix • Proliferate in immunocompromised • Generally observe • Remove with complete excision and cryotherapy • Incomplete excision leads to proliferation" What is congenital Hereditary Endothelial Dystrophy (CHED)?;"• Autosomal recessive • Corneal edema • Present at birth and does not get worse - ""stationary"" • Nystagmus due to reduced visual sensory input from birth" What is keratoconus?;"• Most common corneal ectasias • Thinning of cornea at the apex of the cone • Topographic abnormalities at a young age • Develops initially in puberty to early adulthood • Progressive thinning • Munson’s sign; Rizzutti sign; Vogt lines; Fleischer ring • Associated with painful episodes of corneal hydrops, apical scarring • Due to fragmentation of Bowman's layer → cornea bows forward • Steep corneas, >50 D • High astigmatism • Bilateral disease • Risk factors: atopy, eye rubbing, Marfans, floppy eyelid syndrome, mitral valve prolapse" What is hydrops in keratoconus?;"• Sudden rupture of Descemet's membrane leading to acute corneal edema • Treatment: cycloplegic, hypertonic agent, BCL, aqueous suppressants • Can cause scarring that eventually leads to corneal transplant" What is keratoglobus?;"• Rare corneal ectasia • Globular overall corneal curvature • Thinnest in the periphery • Generalized protrusion of cornea • Present at birth • Commonly associated with corneal perforation and rupture • Strong associated with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type 4 and blue sclera • Associated with flexible joints, bone fractures, deafness, teeth abnormalities" What is pellucid marginal degeneration?;"• Bilateral ectatic disorder • Inferior thinning approximately 1-2 mm in width • Protrusion of cornea above thinning (corneal apex above area of thinning) • Corneal scarring, episodes of hydrops, iron lines - less common compared to keratoconus • ""Crab claw"" configuration = against the rule astigmatism superiorly, with the rule astigmatism inferiorly • Pachymetry and correlating to topography to differentiate from other entities" Which systemic infection is Mooren-like PUK ulcer associated with?;"• Hepatitis C" Which systemic condition is superior limbic keratoconjunctivitis associated with?;"• Autoimmune thyroid disease" What is Schnyder crystalline corneal dystrophy?;"• Mutation in UBIAD1 gene • Rare, progressive stromal dystrophy • Starts with central corneal opacification at all levels, next develops in the periphery, then mid-periphery, then loss of corneal sensation • Loss of photopic vision when pupil is constricted • Vision improves under scotopic vision when pupil is dilated, light passes around central cholesterol • Check cholesterol levels → associated with hyperlipidemia/hypercholesterolemia" What are the corneal findings in congenital glaucoma?;"• Corneal edema • Haab's striae – horizontal lines" What is the prevalence of the 3 main corneal stromal dystrophies?;"• Most common – Granular • 2nd most common – Lattice • 3rd most common - Macular" What corneal findings are associated with birth trauma?;"• When forceps are used, compression of globe vertically which stretches the cornea horizontally • Vertical pattern of Descemet's tears • Left eyes are more commonly affected than right eye • Usually unilateral • Differential diagnosis includes PPMD, the edges are scalloped with wide endings, in Haabs striae the borders are smooth with tapered ends" What are systemic associations with corneal crystals?;"• Multiple myeloma • Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia • Benign monoclonal gammopathy • Crystals are in all layers of cornea" What is Fabry disease?;"• X linked recessive • Defect in alpha galactosidase A • Sphingolipidoses • Corneal verticillata (opacities in epithelium in whorl like pattern) • Secondary deposition in the basal epithelial layer • Posterior spokelike cataracts • Comma-shaped conjunctival aneurysms • Macular edema • Retinal vessel dilation • Systemic findings: renal failure, peripheral neuropathy" What is Hunter's syndrome inheritance pattern and ocular findings?;"• X linked recessive • Pigmentary retinopathy" What are the causes of corneal verticillata?;"• Fabry disease • Multiple sulfatase deficiency • Generalized gangliosidosis • Amiodarone" What is positive versus negative fluorescein staining of cornea?;"● Positive staining: areas of epi disruption ○ Examples – epi defects ● Negative staining: area of interest projects above the surrounding tear film ○ Examples - zoster pseudodendrites and SPK" What is the most common risk factor for fungal keratitis?;"• Trauma with vegetable matter" What are normal age-related endothelial cell counts?;"• At birth: approx. 4,000 • Young adults: approx. 3,000 • 60 years: approx. 2,500 • Cell count decreases linearly until age 60 years, then slower rate" What is acanthamoeba keratitis?;"• Severe eye pain out of proportion to clinical appearance of cornea • Epitheliopathy with or without pseudodendrites • Perineural infiltrates (pathognomonic) • Ring infiltrate - late stage • Cyst form is highly resistant • PHMB 0.02% and chlorhexidine 0.02% are biguanides and cysticidal • Propamidine isethionate 0.1% and hexamidine 0.1% are diamidines and cysticidal • Steroids used with caution if used too early they can induce cyst formation" What is Descemet's membrane?;"• True basement membrane • Basement membrane of corneal endothelium • Type 4 collagen • At birth, Descemet's membrane 3-4 microns thick and increases to 10-12 microns in adults • Two zones, anterior banded developed in utero. posterior non-banded zone, deposited by endothelial cells throughout life" What are conjunctival papillae?;"• Central vascular tuft represented by ""red dot"" in the middle of the bump, surrounded by edema and inflammation" What are corneal stem cells?;"• Located at limbus, in palisades of Vogt region • Radially oriented fibrovascular ridges, perpendicular to corneal margin • More concentrated in the inferior and superior limbus • Limbal stem cells from palisades migrate centripetally to create basal epithelial level" What is stromal keratitis secondary to herpes simplex?;"• Mainly an autoimmune phenomenon • Main treatment - topical steroids • Topical antiviral used to prevent outbreak of epithelial keratitis • HEDS study - topical PF q2h and topical trifluridine QID. Showed no benefit to adding oral acyclovir to topical prednisolone and trifluridine" What is Granular corneal dystrophy 1?;"• Early age onset • TGFBI gene mutation • Deposition of hyaline material that stains red with Masson trichrome stain • Clear spaces between opacities that look like bread crumbs, becomes more confluent with age, does not extend to limbus • Maintain good vision • Photophobia, glare, recurrent erosions" What is granular corneal dystrophy 2 (Avellino corneal dystrophy)?;"• Appearance of both granular and lattice dystrophies • Corneal opacities described as stellate (star-like), snowflake, icicle • TGFBI gene mutation, keratoepithelin protein, chromosome 5q31 • Deposition of hyaline material that stains red with Masson trichrome stain or Congo red" What is associated with unilateral arcus senilis in elderly patient?;"• Contralateral carotid artery disease and ocular hypotony" What is associated with unilateral arcus senilis in an young patient (<40 years old)?;"• Hyperlipoproteinemia (check lipid panel)" What is Mooren's ulcer?;"• Involves only cornea • Very painful • Associated with helminthic infection" What is peripheral ulcerative keratitis?;"• Main association with rheumatoid arthritis • Also associated with HSV, VZV, TB, gonorrhea, syphilis, AIDs • Involves cornea and sclera • Unilateral • Peripheral corneal infiltration with epithelial loss • Very painful" What type of iris atrophy is associated with HSV?;"• Patchy" What type of iris atrophy is associated with VZV?;"• Sectoral" What is a clinical finding ophthalmologists may use in primary HSV diagnosis?;"• Enlarged preauricular lymph node" What are clinical findings in secondary HSV (previously sensitized immune system)?;"• Stromal keratitis • Endotheliitis • Uveitis" What is cryptophthalmos?;"• Partial or complete failure of eye to form" What is pseudo cryptophthalmos?;"• Eyelids fail to separate and gives appearance of eye not forming" What is ankyloblepharon?;"• Part or all of the eyelid margin fails to separate" What is Heerfordt syndrome?;"• Type of systemic sarcoidosis • Granulomatous uveitis • Constitutional symptoms • Parotid swelling • Facial nerve paralysis" What is Lofgren syndrome?;"• Systemic sarcoidosis • Bilateral hilar adenopathy • Arthropathy • Fever • Erythema nodosum" What are causes of giant papillae?;"• Vernal associated conjunctivitis • Contact lens associated conjunctivitis" What is atopic keratoconjunctivitis?;"• Small/medium papillae • Extensive corneal vascularization with opacification • Year round disease • Posterior subcapsular or multifaceted or shield-shaped anterior subcapsular cataracts • Cell-mediated immunity decreased - more susceptible to herpes simplex keratitis and colonization of eyelids with staph aureus" What is a chalazion?;"• Sterile inflammation • Antibiotics do not help the process • Tetracycline (doxycycline) and macrolide (erythromycin) work due to anti-inflammatory properties" What is meibomian gland dysfunction?;"• Hyperemia of eyelid margin • Faster tear breakup time • Posterior telangiectatic vessels • Keratin plugging" What is keratocyte distribution and density in corneal stroma?;"• Parallel and between corneal lamellae • More numerous in the anterior stroma • Responsible for digesting and producing stromal molecules • Least numerous posteriorly • Population declines with age" What is the most detrimental type of corneal graft rejection?;"• Endothelial graft rejection, leads to inflammation and death of grafts endothelial cells. Because they cannot replace themselves, this types of rejection is most detrimental • Also most common type of corneal graft rejection" What is the least detrimental type of corneal graft rejection?;"• Epithelial and stromal rejection • Treated with topical steroids • Once inflammation resolved, corneal epithelium and stroma generally return to normal" What is a Fleischer ring?;"• Iron line deposited at the base of the cone • Landmark for peripheral edge of cone • Use cobalt blue light to detect early signs • Seen in keratoconus" What is Munson’s sign?;"• Lower eyelid is displaced secondary to bulging cornea • Seen in advanced keratoconus" What is Rizzuti sign in keratoconus?;"• Conical reflection on nasal cornea is seen when penlight is shone from temporal side" What are Vogt lines?;"• Vertical/fine parallel lines in posterior stroma/Descemet's membrane • Digital pressure on the eye makes the lines disappear • Distinguish from superficial linear scars that occur from previous hydrops episodes • Seen with keratoconus" What is macular corneal dystrophy?;"• Autosomal recessive (unlike other corneal stromal dystrophies) • Gene CHST6, carbohydrate sulfotransferase, chrom. 16 • Least common corneal stromal dystrophies in North America • Most severe vision loss of the 3 classic stromal corneal dystrophies • Age of presentation is the youngest in macular dystrophy, then lattice then granular • Usually noticed in adolescent years • Associated with severe photophobia and recurrent erosions • Diffuse, fine, superficial clouding in central cornea which extends peripheral (limbus to limbus) and full thickness by 2nd decade • Accumulates GAGs within keratocytes and endothelial cells, and under epithelium • Stain with Alcian blue, colloidal iron, PAS, metachromatic dyes" What is Bietti crystalline corneoretinal dystrophy?;"• Retinal dystrophy • Peripheral corneal crystals • Nyctalopia due to retinal degeneration • Defect in lipid metabolism" What is the differential diagnosis for corneal crystals?;"• Macular dystrophy (mucopolysaccharide) • Granular dystrophy (hyaline) • Lattice dystrophy (amyloid) • Bietti's and Schnyder’s • Ciprofloxacin deposits • Strep Viridans - infectious crystalline keratopathy • Cystinosis • Multiple myeloma • Monoclonal gammopathy" What is conjunctival intraepithelial neoplasia?;"• Consists of dysplastic cells involving varying amount of epithelial layer • Do not penetrate basement membrane • Standard treatment: excision of lesion with 3-4 mm margins, cryotherapy to bordering conjunctiva • Topical treatment: interferon alpha-2b (low side effect profile and tolerability); MMC, 5-FU" What are corneal keloids?;"• Rare • Chalky white lesions • After corneal trauma or perforation • Due to vigorous fibrotic response after trauma • Glistening and jelly like • Congenital keloids - associated with Lowe syndrome, ALC syndrome (acromegaly, cutis gyrata, corneal leukoma), Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome" What is ocular cicatricial pemphigoid?;"• Autoantibodies directed against bullous pemphigoid antigen II in the basement membrane zone • Bilateral • Inferior forniceal depth less than 8mm • Severe disease treated with cyclophosphamide" How is PUK treated?;"• Most important is to address the underlying systemic autoimmune disease • Recessing the conjunctiva distances blood vessels carrying cell mediators to the peripheral cornea" What is Parinaud's oculoglandular syndrome?;"• Granulomatous conjunctivitis + regional lymphadenopathy + constitutional symptoms • Unilateral • Presents 1 week after exposure to causative microorganism • Most common cause: cat scratch disease due to Bartonella henselae • Other causes, tularemia (rabbits), sporotrichosis, tuberculosis, syphilis • Treatment: azithromycin or doxycycline" What is the ocular effect of the Dieffenbachia plant?;"• House plants that contain needle shaped calcium oxalate crystals – raphides • Cause acute keratoconjunctivitis associated needle-like crystals in the cornea when sap of this plant gets into eyes" What is the thinnest location of the cornea?;"• Typically inferotemporal quadrant (thinnest zone of cornea 1.5 mm temporal to geographic center)" What are the risk factors for graft rejection?;"• Deep stromal neovascularization • Peripheral corneal thinning • Ocular surface disease" What is microsporidia?;"• Classified as fungi • Rare cause of conjunctivitis or epithelial keratitis in immunocompromised (AIDS) • Scraping of conjunctiva show gram positive spores • Treat with topical fumagillin" What is ocular melanocytosis?;"• Focal proliferation of subepithelial melanocytes • Pigmentation of episclera • Not mobile • 50% - ipsilateral dermal melanocytosis (Nevus of Ota), proliferation of dermal melanocytes in periocular skin V1 and V2 • 10% develop glaucoma • Risk of uveal melanoma is 1:400 (much greater than sporadic risk in general population) • Only 5% are bilateral" What is reactive arthritis?;"• Caused by gram negative bacterial dysentery (Salmonella, Shigella, Yersinia) • Nongonococcal urethritis • >75% are HLA B27 positive • Papillary conjunctivitis (most common ocular finding) “Can’t see, can’t pee, can’t climb a tree”" What are the causes of chronic follicular conjunctivitis?;"• Chlamydia - inclusion conjunctivitis or trachoma • Toxic follicular conjunctivitis (i.e. glaucoma drops, antiviral drops) • Molluscum" What is the differential diagnosis for cloudy cornea in an infant?;"• Sclerocornea • Trauma • Ulcer • Mucopolysaccharidoses/metabolic storage disease • Peters anomaly • Congenital hereditary endothelial dystrophy (CHED) • Congenital hereditary stromal dystrophy • Dermoid • Congenital glaucoma" What is Peters anomaly?;"• Most common indication for corneal transplant in children • Localized absence of corneal endothelium and Descemet's membrane underneath a central corneal opacity • Inherited sporadically • Bilateral in 80% • Glaucoma in 50% • Associated with aniridia, PFV, retinal detachment, microcornea • Type 1: iridocorneal adhesions in non-vascularized corneal opacity, mutations of PITX2, FOXC1, CYP1B1, PAX6 • Type 2: lens touch cornea of vascularized corneal opacity; failure of lens vesicle to separate from surface ectoderm; mutation of FOXE3" What is Peters plus syndrome?;"• Peters anomaly with the addition of systemic defects: congenital brain defect, heart defects, craniofacial anomalies" What is the dosing of tetracyclines (doxycycline) for blepharitis?;"• Dosing for MGD: 100 mg PO BID x 3-4 weeks then 50-100 mg daily based on clinical response • Use with caution in the following: women of childbearing age, women who are nursing, hx of liver disease, taking warfarin, <8 years old • Cause permanent discoloration of teeth and bones if <8 years age or exposure during pregnancy • Other side effects: photosensitization, GI upset, oral/vaginal candidiasis, reduce efficacy of oral contraceptives" What are the different types corneal iron lines?;"• ""Ferry's line"" = leading edge of filtering bleb • ""Fleischer ring or line"" = base of cone in keratoconus • ""Stocker's line"" = leading edge of pterygium • ""Hudson-Stahli line"" = upper border of normal tear lake (elderly pts)" What is the immune privilege of the cornea?;"• Responsiveness to foreign antigens is relatively suppressed due to the following • Absence of blood vessels and lymphatics • Expression of immunosuppressive factors • Increased expression of Fas ligand (CD95) • Down regulation of MHC molecules" What is microcornea?;"• Autosomal dominant • Clear cornea • Normal thickness • Horizontal diameter < 10 mm • Hyperopic (cornea is relatively flat) • More prone to angle closure glaucoma due to flat cornea • 20% can develop open angle" What is Terrien marginal degeneration?;"• Unilateral or asymmetrically bilateral • Cornea starts to thin superiorly and thinning spreads circumferentially • Epithelium intact • Pannus traverses the area of corneal thinning • End of pannus is a line of lipid deposition • Perforation is rare • If perforation occurs - lamellar transplantation • Starts in 2nd or 3rd decade of life" What is the threshold tear meniscus below which is considered abnormal and a sign of dry eye?;"• 0.3 mm" What is the corneal vertex?;"• Point located at the intersection of the line of fixation and corneal surface. For refractive surgery, center your ablation around corneal vertex." What is posterior polymorphous corneal dystrophy?;"• Diffuse abnormality of Descemet's membrane • Multi-laminated appearance • Recur in graft in PK • Prognosis of PK or endothelial keratoplasty depends on presence/absence of PAS and management of glaucoma • Mild localized swelling managed with anterior stromal micropuncture" What are the criteria for a donor cornea?;"• Endothelial cell count 2000 or more • Death-to-preservation time 12-18 hours • Age of donor between 2 years to 70 years • Exclusion criteria: death of unknown cause, active septicemia, HIV/hepB/hepC, active ocular inflammation" What are diabetic corneal findings?;"• Hypoesthesia • Poor adherence of epithelium to stroma • Delayed healing time with removal of epithelium at the time of surgery" What is congenital hereditary stromal dystrophy;"• Rare • Presents at birth • Bilateral opacification of central stroma (white flakes) • Peripheral cornea is clear • Moderate-severe visual loss • Non progressive/slowly progressive • Thickened cornea • Mutation in decorin gene on chromosome 12" What is the gene defect in gelatinous drop like dystrophy?;"● Defect in tumor associated calcium signal transducer 2" What is an axial power map or "sagittal curvature" map?;"• Based on reference axis through the line of sight • Better estimation of central corneal power and less accurate at measuring peripheral cornea" What is instantaneous map, or tangential power map, or meridional power map?;"• Based on best-fit spherical approximation at the point of cornea being measured • Better estimation of peripheral corneal power" What is an epibulbar dermoid?;"• Most commonly inferotemporal • Can cause astigmatism • Associated with Goldenhar syndrome - dental and skeletal abnormalities and preauricular skin tags. vertebral abnormalities include butterfly vertebrae, hemivertebrae - secondary scoliosis, kyphosis, rib abnormalities" What are some examples of negative staining?;"• SPK • Pseudodendrites • ABMD • Thygeson superficial punctate keratitis" What is dacryoadenitis?;"• Most commonly secondary to sterile inflammatory disease (orbital pseudotumor variant) • EBV most common viral cause • Multiple corneal infiltrates are associated with EBV" What is Peters anomaly type 1?;"• Iridocorneal adhesions in area of non-vascularized corneal opacity • Mutations in PITX2, FOXC1, CYP1B1, PAX6" What is Peters anomaly type 2?;"• Lens touch to area of vascularized corneal opacity • Failure of lens vesicle to separate from surface ectoderm • Mutation in FOXE3" What is the average thickness of corneal epithelium?;"• 50 microns" What is the average volume of the tear lake?;"• 7-10 microliters" Which corneal layer is most susceptible to UV radiation (i.e. welding, snow blindness)?;"• Epithelium" What is c-ANCA?;"• Cytoplasmic antineutrophil cytoplasmic abs • Cytoplasmic staining pattern • Target antigen is proteinase 3 • Positive in Wegener's granulomatosis" What is p-ANCA?;"• Peri-nuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic abs • Perinuclear staining pattern • Target antigen is myeloperoxidase • Positive in polyarteritis nodosa and IBD" What is nanophthalmos?;"• Small eye • ""N"" normally organized (normal lens, cornea, etc) • High hyperopia • Short axial length 15-20 mm • Crowded AC • Thick/rigid sclera • Choroidal detachments and hemorrhages" What is microphthalmos?;"• Small eye • ""M"" messed up • Disorganized eye • Associated with trisomy 13, intellectual disability, dwarfism" What are the different forms of ichthyosis?;"• Ichthyosis vulgaris - autosomal dominant, most common • X-linked ichthyosis - form that has corneal changes" What is Tyrosinemia?;"• Autosomal recessive • Defect of tyrosine aminotransferase • Excess tyrosine in blood and urine; normal phenylalanine level • Pseudodendrites • Think of this in child with recurrent dendrites - may be misdiagnosed as having recurrent HSV keratitis • Treat with restricting dietary tyrosine and phenylalanine" What was the stromal keratitis arm of the HEDS study?;"• Treated with PF q2h and trifluridine QID • Topical antiviral used to prevent outbreak of epithelial keratitis • No benefit to adding oral acyclovir to topical prednisone + trifluridine" What are the three sphingolipidoses that cause corneal verticillata?;"• Fabry • Multiple sulfatase • Generalized gangliosidosis" What is chlamydia trachoma?;"• Limbal follicles sequelae - Herbert pits • Tarsal conjunctival scarring • Vascular pannus most marked superiorly • Conjunctival follicles most numerous on superior tarsus" What is olopatadine?;"• Selective H1 receptor antagonist (rapid onset) and inhibitor of mast cell degranulation (prolonged duration) • Therapeutic and prophylactic" What is topical cyclosporine?;"• Fungal metabolite that reduces ocular inflammation • Inhibit Th2 lymphocytes proliferation, IL-2 production, histamine release from mast cells • Improves tear film stability • Anti-inflammatory effects on meibomian glands • Treats vernal and atopic keratoconjunctivitis" What is oncocytoma?;"• Slow-growing cystadenoma • Originates from ductal and acinar cells of main and accessory lacrimal glands" What is cornea plana?;"• Flat cornea with central corneal power < 43 D • Cornea curvature similar to adjacent to sclera • Isolated cases occur in Finnish individuals • Seen in other ocular abnormalities like sclerocornea and colobomas • Associated with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome • Open and chronic angle closure glaucoma can be found" What is the role of laser therapy in band keratopathy?;"• Phototherapeutic keratectomy (PTK) is not recommended because calcium ablate at slower rate than the stroma. End up with irregular astigmatism • Rather treat with epithelial debridement and then application of disodium EDTA" What are the exam findings in limbal stem cell deficiency?;"• Loss of palisades of Vogt • Peripheral pannus formation • Late staining of epithelium (""wavelike"" irregularity) • Punctate epithelial keratopathy • Persistent epithelial defects - lead to stromal loss (ulcers), stromal scarring, corneal perforation • Conjunctivalization - conjunctiva grows onto the cornea to fill epithelial defects" What is alkaptonuria?;"• Inability to metabolize tyrosine and phenylalanine • Deposition of pigmented material near medial and lateral rectus muscle insertions • Urine turns dark if left standing, due to elevated urinary homogentisic acids • Treated with high dose vitamin C to improve arthropathy" What is cystinosis?;"• Autosomal recessive • Most common in French speaking Canadians • Three forms: infantile (most common), adolescent and adult • Crystals in anterior stroma • Severe renal impairment, patchy depigmentation of RPE, generally do not have vision loss" What are different parts of the orbicularis muscle and their function?;"• Orbital portion: responsible for voluntary eyelid closure • Pretarsal and preseptal: responsible for unconscious blinking of eyelids" What are the common cornea complications of hard CL?;"• Central epithelial edema → treat with discontinuing lens • Corneal warpage" What is a common corneal complication of soft CL?;"• Micropannus of 1-2 mm • Treatment with lens holiday or switch to lens with higher oxygen transmissibility" What is superior limbic keratoconjunctivitis?;"• Caused by mechanical trauma of upper eyelid on superior limbal area • Commonly in adult women • Asymmetrically bilateral • Papillary reaction on palpebral conjunctiva • Hypertrophy of superior conjunctiva • Punctate epithelial erosions on superior conjunctiva and cornea, superior corneal pannus • Associated with thyroid abnormalities • Obtain TSH, free T4 • Treatment: aggressive lubrication, resection of conjunctiva, large diameter soft CLs, cauterization of conjunctiva, Restasis" What are the most common etiologies of post refractive surgery infectious keratitis?;"• Within 10 days - gram positive bacteria • More than 10 days after surgery - atypical mycobacteria" What is the most accurate imaging modality for measuring sulcus-to-sulcus distances?;"• High-frequency ultrasound (UBM) • Structures posterior to iris are imaged with great accuracy" What is a Scheimpflug camera (Pentacam)?;"• Mounted on rotating arm • Takes multiple images of the cornea while rapidly rotating around • Images generate anterior and posterior curvature maps, pachymetry maps, anterior chamber depth • Accurate for measuring posterior corneal curvature" What is a scanning-slit topographer (Orbscan)?;"• Mathematically derived posterior curvature maps" What is a keratometer?;"• Measures anterior corneal curvature and assumes posterior corneal curvature to be fixed constant" What is the meaning of vernal?;"• Spring" What is vernal conjunctivitis?;"• Allergic phenomena • Children within in first 2 decades of life during spring or fall • Giant papillary reaction • Horner-Trantas dots - jelly like limbal nodules representing eosinophils • Shield ulcer - corneal epi defect upper half of cornea" What are the risk factors for fungal keratitis?;"• Trauma with plant or vegetable matter • CL wearer • Prior corneal surgery (PKP and RK) • Chronic keratitis • Topical steroids" What is filamentous fungal keratitis?;"• Common etiology: aspergillus and fusarium • Gray-white infiltrate with feathery margin • Multifocal or satellite lesions. Anterior lesion may elevate surface of cornea, rough/dry/gritty appearance • Treat with Natamycin 5% (commercially produced) until cultures are back • If Aspergillus, then treat with amphotericin B (compounding pharmacy) • In United States, occur most commonly in Southern areas, secondary to Fusarium" What is Yeast keratitis?;"• Most common etiology: Candida • Anterior raised colonies, remains superficial • Culture with blood, Sabouraud, brain-heart infusion • Treat with amphotericin B (compounding pharmacy)" What is lisch epithelial corneal dystrophy?;"• X-linked dominant • Densely-crowded epithelial microcysts in band-like or feathery pattern • Between bands, epithelial is clear • Treatment not needed unless bands cross visual axis, then epithelium can be scraped • Do not have epithelial erosions • Most closely resembles Meesmann corneal dystrophy (both have intraepithelial microcysts) • Difference between Meesman and Lisch is that Meesman has diffuse evenly spaced cysts. Lisch has broad, band-shaped feather lesions in whorled patterns that more densely crowded together" What are the systemic and corneal findings in congenital syphilis?;"• Interstitial keratitis, presents late in 1st decade, immune-mediated manifestation • Dental deformities (notched incisors, mulberry molars) • Saddle nose, saber skins, frontal bossing, perforation of palate • Deafness • Mental retardation" What are the ocular findings in acquired syphilis?;"• Much less likely to develop interstitial keratitis compared to congenital syphilis • If interstitial keratitis occurs, unilateral 60% of time • Uveitis and retinitis more common sequelae in acquired than congenital" What is acute hydrops in keratoconus?;"• Spontaneous rupture of Descemet's membrane • Passage of fluid into stroma • I-S values >1.4 associated with keratoconus (""I-S"" value compares keratometric reading inferior cornea to superior cornea) • Treat with topical hypertonic saline drops, patching, cycloplegia, aqueous suppressant, BCL while awaiting Descemet membrane repair itself, takes 6-12 weeks • Also treat with injection of air or gas (C3F8, SF6) into anterior chamber, speeds up resolution of edema. ""Pneumatic descemetopexy"", does not influence final visual outcomes or need for corneal transplantation" What is the endothelial coefficient of variation and hexagonality?;"• Coefficient of variation: how variable endothelial cell size. >0.4 is abnormal, increased risk for postoperative edema • Hexagonality: <50% is abnormal, called pleomorphism, increased risk of postoperative edema • View endothelium with specular microscopy" When does endothelium act like epithelium?;"• ICE - unilateral, no inherited • PPMD - bilateral, autosomal dominant • Both have corectopia, glaucoma, endothelial dysfunction" What is the location of conjunctival involvement in adult inclusion conjunctivitis?;"• Typically involves inferior palpebral conjunctiva" What type of conjunctival reaction is seen in neonatal inclusion conjunctivitis (ophthalmia neonatorum disease)?;"• Papillary reaction (not follicular)" What is fleck dystrophy?;"• Autosomal dominant • Dandruff-like deposits throughout stroma • Spare epithelium and endothelium • Vision does not decrease" What are the risk factors for corneal decompensation after intraocular surgery?;"• > 640 microns central corneal thickness • Endothelial cells <1,000" What is familial dysautonomia (Riley day syndrome)?;"• Ashkenazi family • Skin blotching • Neurotrophic keratopathy • Decreased tearing when crying • Enlarged corneal nerves" What is the rate of pterygium recurrence?;"• Highest rate of recurrence with bare sclera, leaving involved area open; 40-75% rate of recurrence • With simple closure, amniotic membranes, or conjunctival autograft, rate of recurrence is 3-5%" What are the clinical findings in congenital glaucoma?;"• Photophobia • Corneal edema • Corneal horizontal diameter >12 mm • Horizontal tears in Descemet's membrane = Haab striae" What is the most common cause of explosive endophthalmitis after penetrating eye trauma?;"• Bacillus cereus - spores, found in soil/vegetative material • Species are motile • Treated with intravitreal vancomycin or clindamycin • 25% of post traumatic endophthalmitis" At what corneal thickness does corneal epithelial edema occur?;"• 700 microns or more" What is the inheritance pattern and ocular findings in Hunter syndrome?;"• X-linked recessive • Pigmentary retinopathy" What is Fraser syndrome?;"• Autosomal recessive • Associated with cryptophthalmos • Malformations of genitals, nose, ears, larynx and renal system • Mutations in FRAS1, codes for extracellular matrix protein" What is infectious crystalline keratopathy?;"• White, branching stromal deposits resembling snowflakes with no or minimal inflammatory signs • History of PKP, chronic topical steroids • Bacteria gain access via epithelial ingrowth through suture track • Most common: strep viridans (alpha hemolytic strep) • Treat with topical fortified vancomycin or cefazolin, stop steroids, broad spec systemic antibiotics • If resistant to treatment then repeat PKP" What were the results of the HEDS trial?;"• Topical trifluridine and topical steroids expedite resolution of stromal inflammation in HSV stromal keratitis • Adding oral acyclovir did not provide additional improvement • Long term oral antiviral prophylaxis reduces recurrences of HSV keratitis (recommend if >1 episode of HSV keratitis) • This trial did not test whether topical trifluridine + topical steroids is better than oral acyclovir • General consensus: oral antiviral with topical steroid is good alternative (compared to topical trifluridine + topical steroids) • Antiviral agent used in isolated HSV stromal keratitis to prevent epithelial keratitis while on steroid drops" Recurrent dendrites in a child is seen with which systemic metabolic condition?;"• Seen with tyrosinemia, these patients do not have true dendrites, rather, they have pseudodendrites" What is Rizzuti sign?;"• Conical reflection on the nasal cornea when penlight is shone temporally • Seen in keratoconus" What are the screening serum markers and ocular effect of Sjogren’s syndrome?;"• Screening: ANA, SS-A, SS-B • Lymphocytic infiltration of lacrimal gland • Topical beta blocker and Diamox worsen dry eyes" What is the difference between DMEK an DSEK?;"• DMEK - transplant just Descemet membrane and endothelium • DSEK - transplant Descemet membrane/endothelium and portion of posterior stroma" What is disciform keratitis?;"• Overlying stroma and epithelium have edema in round pattern • Secondary to endotheliitis • Treat with oral acyclovir (penetrate deeper cornea tissues via aqueous) + topical trifluridine or ganciclovir • Most commonly due to HSV and VZV, both present the same" Which medications cause corneal verticillata?;"• Amiodarone (most common) • Chloroquine • Hydroxychloroquine • Chlorpromazine • Subconj gentamicin • Ibuprofen • Indomethacin • Naproxen • Tamoxifen" What is the risk of developing glaucoma and uveal melanoma in ocular melanocytosis?;"• 10% - glaucoma • 1/400 - uveal melanoma (much greater than sporadic risk in general population)" What is the a platinum kimura spatula most useful for?;"• Obtaining bacterial cultures" What is a Dacron swab most useful for?;"• Obtaining viral cultures" What is the difference between megalocornea versus congenital glaucoma?;"• Megalocornea - nonprogressive, bilateral, X-linked recessive, horizontal diameter >13 mm, normal IOP, A scan with normal axial length and deep AC • Congenital glaucoma - Haab striae (break in Descemet membrane), elevated IOP, elongated axial length" What are the indications for anterior chamber washout in an eye with hyphema?;"• IOP ≥ 60 mmHg for ≥ 48 hours • Hyphema does not decrease ≥ 50% by 8 days • IOP ≥ 25 mmHg with total hyphema for ≥ 5 days • IOP 24 mmHg for ≥ 24 hours (or any transient increase IOP 30 mmHg) with sickle cell trait/disease • Signs of corneal blood staining • Children at risk for amblyopia • Significant visual impairment" What is the most common cause of chronic blepharoconjunctivitis?;"• Staph aureus" What are the branches of CNV1?;"• Frontal • Lacrimal • Nasociliary" Involvement of which branch of CNV1 has the highest risk of ocular involvement?;"• Nasociliary branch" What is the treatment of HZO?;"• Valacyclovir 1g TID or acyclovir 800 mg 5x/day or famciclovir 500 mg TID for 7-10 days • If retinal or choroidal or optic nerve or cranial nerve involvement → intravenous acyclovir 10 mg/kg IV q8h for 7 days" What is Terrien’s marginal degeneration?;"• T: Thinning cornea • T: Top (starts superiorly) • T: age is in the Thirties • T: Treatment Transplantation (crescent shaped lamellar)" What mimics Terrien’s marginal degeneration and is seen in children?;"• Fuchs superficial marginal keratitis" What is Kaposi sarcoma?;"• Herpesvirus/human herpesvirus 8 • Secondary to malignant transformation of vascular endothelium • Can cause subconjunctival hemorrhage • Associated with HIV" What is the osmolarity, lysozyme composition, and lactoferrin composition of tears in dry eye syndrome?;"• Increased osmolarity • Decreased lysozyme and lactoferrin • This test is not necessarily diagnostic of dry eye in isolation • There can be variable results at the same appointment • Results should be considered in context of clinical signs" What is Marfan syndrome?;"• Autosomal dominant • Abnormal fibrillin • Rule out aortic root dilation and aneurysm • Zonules are brittle • Superotemporal ectopia lentis (50-80%)" What is homocystinuria?;"• Patients are tall and 50% have intellectual disability • Inferonasal dislocation of lens • Brittle zonules • Prone to thromboembolic events with general anesthesia • Treat with dietary restrictions with low methionine and high cysteine" Which fungi are filamentous?;"• Fusarium • Aspergillus" Which fungi are septate?;"• Aspergillus" Which fungi are non-septate?;"• Mucor • Rhizopus" How soon can limbal stem cell transplantation be performed after chemical injury?;"• 2 weeks • Reducing inflammation prior to transplantation increases grafts odds of survival because inflammation leads to cell death • Same goes for corneal transplant" What are Hassall-Henle bodies?;"• AKA peripheral endothelial guttae • Small, wart-like, transparent peripheral excrescences • Found in descemet membrane • Common in elderly → normal aging change → thickening of Descemet membrane that happens throughout life • Composed of collagen • Represent overactive hyaline production by endothelial cells • Best seen with specular reflection with the slit lamp • Pathologic when these appear in central cornea → called cornea guttae → Fuchs endothelial dystrophy" What are the causes of ectopia lentis?;"• Marfan syndrome • Homocystinuria • Aniridia • Congenital glaucoma • Ehlers-Danlos • Hyperlysinemia • Sulfite oxidase deficiency • Weill-Marchesani disease • Isolated anomaly • Ectopia lentis et pupillae • Pseudoexfoliation syndrome • Trauma • Microspherophakia" What are diagnostic tools that can be used to analyze the posterior corneal surface?;"● Scheinflug tomography ● Pentacam ● Galilei" What virus and which serotypes causes Epidemic Keratoconjunctivitis?;"• Adenovirus serotypes 8, 19, 37 • Subgroup D" What are the differences between Diffuse Lamellar Keratitis and Infectious Keratitis?;"● Diffuse Lamellar Keratitis ○ Within 24 hours of surgery ○ Begins at flap periphery ○ More intense inflammation in periphery ○ Minimal to no anterior chamber reaction ● Infectious Keratitis ○ 2-3 days postoperatively ○ Anywhere under flap ○ Focal inflammation around infection ○ Mild to moderate anterior chamber reaction" What wavelength of light can cross-link collagen and what is it used for?;"• 365 nm with concomitant administration of topical riboflavin • Treats corneal ectasia" What is Epithelial Basement Membrane Dystrophy?;"• No documented inheritance pattern • Abnormality in epithelial turnover, maturation, and production of the basement membrane • Thickened basement membrane with microcysts or fibrillar material between basement membrane and Bowman layer • Often with abnormal hemidesmosomes • 6-18% of population" What does a handheld esthesiometer (Cochet-Bonnet) measure?;"• Contact device that measures corneal sensation"