Optic Neuritis

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Definition & Causes - Optic Nerve Alarm

Inflammation of the optic nerve: acute, monocular vision loss, dyschromatopsia (red desat), pain with eye movements.

  • Types & Comparison:
    • Typical: ~70% MS-related. Unilateral, retrobulbar pain, good steroid response & prognosis.
    • Atypical: Not MS. Often bilateral, severe vision loss, marked disc edema (papillitis), poor steroid response. Broader investigation needed.
  • Key Causes:
    • Demyelinating: Multiple Sclerosis (MS), NMOSD, MOGAD.
    • Parainfectious: Post-viral (measles, mumps, varicella).
    • Infectious: Syphilis, TB, Lyme, Bartonella, viral (CMV).
    • Non-infectious Inflammatory: Sarcoidosis, SLE, Behcet's.
    • Idiopathic.

⭐ Most common cause of typical optic neuritis in adults is Multiple Sclerosis.

Clinical Picture - Vision Vanish

  • Symptoms:
    • Acute unilateral vision loss (develops over hours-days).
    • Periocular pain, worse with eye movements (present in >90% of cases).
    • Dyschromatopsia (impaired color vision, especially red desaturation).
    • Photopsias (flashes of light).
  • Signs:
    • Relative Afferent Pupillary Defect (RAPD).
    • Visual field defects: Central or centrocaecal scotoma most common. Central scotoma visual field defect
    • Optic disc appearance:
      • Papillitis (swollen disc): ~1/3 of cases.
      • Retrobulbar neuritis (normal disc initially): ~2/3 of cases. Optic neuritis: eye anatomy, neuron, myelin sheath
      • Neuroretinitis (optic disc swelling + macular star) - less common.
  • Associated Phenomena:
    • Uhthoff's phenomenon: Transient visual blurring with ↑ body temperature.
    • Pulfrich phenomenon: Altered depth perception with moving objects.
  • 📌 Mnemonic: 'ON Causes PAIN' (Optic Neuritis: Pain, Acuity ↓, Impaired color, Nerve signs).

⭐ Over 90% of typical optic neuritis cases experience pain on eye movement, often preceding visual loss.

Diagnosis - Nerve Detective

  • MRI Brain & Orbits (with gadolinium): Key initial test.

    • Optic nerve: Enhancement, T2 hyperintensity.
    • Brain: T2 hyperintense lesions (periventricular, juxtacortical, infratentorial, spinal cord) predict MS.

    ⭐ An MRI of the brain showing characteristic demyelinating lesions at the time of a first episode of optic neuritis is the strongest predictor for developing clinically definite Multiple Sclerosis.

  • Visual Evoked Potentials (VEP):

    • Delayed P100 latency with preserved waveform (confirms demyelination).
  • Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT):

    • RNFL & GCIPL thinning (axonal loss in chronic stage).
  • CSF Analysis (if MS suspected):

    • Oligoclonal bands (OCBs), ↑ IgG index.
  • Serology (for atypical ON: bilateral, recurrent, severe):

    • AQP4-IgG (NMOSD).
    • MOG-IgG (MOGAD).

Diagnostic Workup Flow:

Treatment & Outlook - Visionary Ventures

  • Acute Management (ONTT Guidelines):
    • Primary: IV Methylprednisolone (IVMP) 1g/day for 3 days.
    • Followed by: Oral prednisolone 1mg/kg/day for 11 days, then slow taper.
    • ⚠️ Oral prednisone alone contraindicated (↑ recurrence risk).
  • Alternative/Adjunctive:
    • PLEX: For severe/atypical cases or no steroid response.
  • Etiology-Specific Treatment:
    • NMOSD/MOGAD: Long-term immunosuppression (Rituximab, Azathioprine, MMF) to prevent relapses.
  • Prognosis & Long-term Outlook:
    • Typical ON: Good visual recovery (weeks-months).
    • MS Risk: Stratify; high-risk may need early DMTs.

⭐ The ONTT demonstrated that while IV corticosteroids accelerate visual recovery in typical optic neuritis, they do not improve the final visual outcome at 6 months compared to placebo; however, oral prednisone alone was associated with an increased risk of new attacks.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Strongly linked to Multiple Sclerosis (MS); often its first sign.
  • Presents with acute painful monocular vision loss, RAPD, and impaired color vision (especially red).
  • Uhthoff's phenomenon (worsening with heat) is common.
  • Optic disc: Often normal (retrobulbar neuritis) or swollen (papillitis); optic atrophy develops later.
  • VEP shows delayed P100 latency. MRI reveals demyelinating lesions.
  • Treatment: IV methylprednisolone speeds recovery. Oral steroids alone are contraindicated.

Practice Questions: Optic Neuritis

Test your understanding with these related questions

Which is the earliest feature of multiple sclerosis ?

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Flashcards: Optic Neuritis

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The most common field defect in optic neuritis is a relative _____ or centrocecal scotoma.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

The most common field defect in optic neuritis is a relative _____ or centrocecal scotoma.

central

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