The red eye
- PMID: 308993
The red eye
Abstract
The nonophthalmic physician confronted by a patient with a red eye should be able to distinguish common microbial or allergic conjunctivitis from potentially blinding disorders, such as acute angle closure glaucoma, uveitis, or herpes simplex keratitis, and should remain alert for an associated systemic disease, such as rheumatoid arthritis, polycythemia, or carotid cavernous fistula. The physician should approach the red eye systematically: take a careful history, including type of pain; measure visual acuity; observe the pattern of redness, the type of discharge, the shape of the pupil, and the opacities of the media; and measure the intraocular pressure.
Similar articles
-
The red eye. When can you treat--when should you refer?Med Times. 1979 Dec;107(12):34-8, 40. Med Times. 1979. PMID: 574608 No abstract available.
-
[From conjunctivitis to glaucoma. When is a red eye an alarm signal?].MMW Fortschr Med. 2002 Mar 14;144(11):30-3. MMW Fortschr Med. 2002. PMID: 12066506 German.
-
The red eye.P N G Med J. 1992 Mar;35(1):67-70. P N G Med J. 1992. PMID: 1566608 No abstract available.
-
[Red eye in children].Rev Prat. 2008 Feb 29;58(4):353-7. Rev Prat. 2008. PMID: 18506971 Review. French.
-
Management of the red eye for the primary care physician.Am J Med. 2006 Apr;119(4):302-6. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2005.07.065. Am J Med. 2006. PMID: 16564769 Review.