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Eye Disorders
Retinal Disorders
Central and Branch Retinal Artery Occlusion
Etiology
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    Central and Branch Retinal Artery Occlusion(Retinal Artery Occlusion)

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    Central retinal artery occlusion occurs when the central retinal artery becomes blocked, usually due to an embolus. It causes sudden, painless, unilateral, and usually severe vision loss. Diagnosis is by history and characteristic retinal findings on funduscopy. Decreasing intraocular pressure can be done within the first 24 h of occlusion to attempt to dislodge the embolus. If patients present within the first few hours of occlusion, some centers catheterize the carotid artery and selectively inject thrombolytic drugs.

    Etiology

    Retinal artery occlusion may be due to embolism or thrombosis.

    Emboli may come from any of the following:

    • Atherosclerotic plaques
    • Endocarditis
    • Fat
    • Atrial myxoma

    Thrombosis is a less common cause of retinal artery occlusion but can be seen with systemic vasculitis such as SLE and giant cell arteritis.

    Giant cell arteritis (see Vasculitis: Giant Cell Arteritis) is an important cause of arterial occlusion that requires prompt diagnosis and treatment.

    Occlusion can affect a branch of the retinal artery as well as the central retinal artery.

    Neovascularization (abnormal new vessel formation) of the retina or iris (rubeosis iridis) with secondary (neovascular) glaucoma occurs in about 20% of patients within weeks to months after occlusion. Vitreous hemorrhage may result from retinal neovascularization.

    Symptoms and Signs

    Retinal artery occlusion causes sudden, painless, severe vision loss or visual field defect, usually unilaterally.

    The pupil may respond poorly to direct light but constricts briskly when the other eye is illuminated (relative afferent pupillary defect). In acute cases, funduscopy shows a pale, opaque fundus with a red fovea (cherry-red spot). Typically, the arteries are attenuated and may even appear bloodless. An embolus (eg, a cholesterol embolus, called a Hollenhorst plaque) is sometimes visible. If a major branch is occluded rather than the entire artery, fundus abnormalities and vision loss are limited to that sector of the retina.

    Patients who have giant cell arteritis are 55 or older and may have a headache, a tender and palpable temporal artery, jaw claudication, fatigue, or a combination.

    Diagnosis

    • Clinical evaluation
    • Color fundus photography and fluorescein angiography

    The diagnosis is suspected when a patient has acute, painless, severe vision loss. Funduscopy is usually confirmatory. Fluorescein angiography is often done and shows absence of perfusion in the affected artery.

    Once the diagnosis is made, carotid Doppler ultrasonography and echocardiography should be done to identify an embolic source so that further embolization can be prevented.

    If giant cell arteritis is suspected, ESR, C-reactive protein, and platelet count should be done immediately. These tests may not be necessary if an embolic plaque is visible in the central retinal artery.

    Photographs

    Central Retinal Artery Occlusion

    Central Retinal Artery Occlusion

    Prognosis

    Patients with a branch artery occlusion may maintain good to fair vision, but with central artery occlusion, vision loss is often profound, even with treatment. Once retinal infarction occurs (as quickly as 90 min after the occlusion), vision loss is permanent.

    Treatment

    • Sometimes reduction of intraocular pressure

    Immediate treatment is indicated if occlusion occurred within 24 h of presentation. Reduction of intraocular pressure with ocular hypotensive drugs (eg, topical timololSome Trade Names
    BLOCADREN
    TIMOPTIC
    Click for Drug Monograph
    0.5%, acetazolamideSome Trade Names
    DIAMOX
    Click for Drug Monograph
    500 mg IV or po), intermittent digital massage over the closed eyelid, or anterior chamber paracentesis may dislodge an embolus and allow it to enter a smaller branch of the artery, thus reducing the area of retinal ischemia. Some centers have tried infusing thrombolytics into the carotid artery to dissolve the obstructing clot. Nonetheless, treatments for retinal artery occlusions rarely improve visual acuity. Surgical or laser-mediated embolectomy is available but not commonly done. These treatments are sometimes shown to be effective in small case series, but none have strong evidence to support efficacy.

    Pearls & Pitfalls
    • Consider immediate measures to reduce intraocular pressure in patients who have sudden, painless, severe loss of vision.

    Patients with occlusion secondary to giant cell arteritis should receive high-dose systemic corticosteroids.

    Key Points

    • Central or branch retinal artery occlusion can be caused by an embolus (eg, due to atherosclerosis or endocarditis), thrombosis, or giant cell arteritis.
    • Painless, severe loss of vision affects part or all of the visual field.
    • Confirm the diagnosis by doing funduscopy (typically showing a pale, opaque fundus with a red fovea and arterial attenuation).
    • Do color fundus photography and fluorescein angiography and search for an embolic source by doing Doppler ultrasonography and echocardiography.
    • Treat immediately if possible with ocular hypotensive drugs (eg, topical timololSome Trade Names
      BLOCADREN
      TIMOPTIC
      Click for Drug Monograph
      or IV or oral acetazolamideSome Trade Names
      DIAMOX
      Click for Drug Monograph
      ), intermittent digital massage over the closed eyelid, or anterior chamber paracentesis.

    Last full review/revision December 2012 by Sunir J. Garg, MD, FACS

    Content last modified January 2013

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