Diabetic Retinopathy - Sweet Sight Sabotage
Pathogenesis: Chronic hyperglycemia → microangiopathy (pericyte loss, BM thickening) → capillary occlusion & leakage.
Key Features:
- NPDR (Non-Proliferative): Microaneurysms (earliest), dot/blot hemorrhages, hard exudates (leakage), cotton wool spots (ischemia), IRMA (Intraretinal Microvascular Abnormalities).
- PDR (Proliferative): Neovascularization (NVD: disc; NVE: elsewhere), Vitreous Hemorrhage, Tractional RD.
- CSME (Clinically Significant Macular Edema): Retinal thickening/hard exudates near fovea (e.g., within 500µm of center; or thickening ≥1DD within 1DD of center).
ETDRS Classification Highlights:
| Stage | Features |
|---|---|
| Mild NPDR | ≥1 Microaneurysm |
| Moderate NPDR | More than mild, less than severe NPDR |
| Severe NPDR | 4-2-1 Rule: Hemorrhages (≥20/quad) in 4Q; Venous beading in 2Q; IRMA in 1Q |
| PDR | NVD/NVE, Vitreous/Preretinal Hemorrhage |
| High-Risk PDR | NVD >1/4-1/3DD; NVD with VH; NVE >1/2DD with VH |

Management Outline:
Hypertensive Retinopathy - Pressure Cooker Peepers
Pathogenesis: Chronic ↑BP → vasospasm, endothelial damage, ↑permeability, blood-retinal barrier breakdown. Key Features:
- Arteriolar: Generalized/focal narrowing, straightening, AV nipping (Gunn's sign), copper wiring (early sclerosis), silver wiring (advanced sclerosis).
- Exudative: Cotton wool spots (NFL infarcts), flame/dot-blot hemorrhages, hard exudates, macular star.
- Optic disc: Papilledema (Grade IV, indicates malignant hypertension).
Keith-Wagener-Barker (KWB) Classification:
| Grade | Findings |
|---|---|
| I | Mild generalized arteriolar narrowing/attenuation. |
| II | More pronounced sclerosis, definite AV nipping. |
| III | Copper/silver wiring, hemorrhages, cotton wool spots, hard exudates. |
| IV | Grade III + Papilledema. |
⭐ Presence of papilledema (KWB Grade IV) signifies malignant hypertension and is an ophthalmic emergency requiring urgent blood pressure control to prevent systemic and ocular complications.
Retinal Vessel Occlusions - Vision Traffic Jams
Sudden, painless vision loss is characteristic. Key differences between Central Retinal Vein Occlusion (CRVO) and Central Retinal Artery Occlusion (CRAO):
| Feature | CRVO | CRAO |
|---|---|---|
| Vision | Sudden, painless loss; variable | Sudden, profound, painless loss (CF-PL) |
| Fundus | 📌 "Blood & thunder": hemorrhages, CWS, disc edema | 📌 "Cherry red spot"; pale retina, box-carring |
| Prognosis | Non-ischaemic (better) vs Ischaemic (poor, ↑NVG risk) | Poor; irreversible damage in 90-100 min. Emergency! |
| Assoc. | HTN, DM, glaucoma | Emboli, GCA |
- Branch Retinal Artery Occlusion (BRAO): Affects a branch artery; sectoral retinal pallor. Possible embolus.
Risk Factors:
- Common: HTN, DM, HLD, smoking, OCPs, coagulopathies.
- Specific: Glaucoma (CRVO), atherosclerosis (CRAO).
Investigations: Fundoscopy, FFA, OCT. Systemic: BP, bloods (glucose, lipids, ESR/CRP for GCA).
Emergency Management of CRAO:

⭐ Suspect GCA in CRAO for patients >50 yrs with ↑ESR/CRP; start high-dose systemic steroids immediately to save fellow eye.
ROP & Other Syndromes - Tiny Vessels, Big Trouble
-
Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP)
- Screening: Birth weight <1500g or Gestational Age <32 weeks; or BW 1500-2000g / GA 32-35 weeks + risk factors.
- Zones: I (posterior pole), II (mid-periphery to nasal ora serrata), III (remaining temporal crescent).
- Stages:
Stage Description 1 Demarcation Line 2 Ridge 3 Ridge + Extraretinal Fibrovascular Proliferation 4 Partial Retinal Detachment (A: extramacular, B: macular) 5 Total Retinal Detachment - Plus Disease: Posterior pole vascular dilation & tortuosity. ⭐ > Indicates aggressive ROP, urgent treatment needed.
- Management: Laser ablation, Anti-VEGF injections.

-
Eales' Disease: Affects young males; idiopathic peripheral periphlebitis, neovascularization, recurrent vitreous hemorrhage.
-
Sickle Cell Retinopathy: Proliferative stages feature "sea-fan" neovascularization (Stage 3); other stages: 1 (occlusion), 2 (A-V anastomoses), 4 (vitreous hemorrhage), 5 (RD).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Diabetic Retinopathy: Leading cause of preventable blindness; NPDR (microaneurysms, hemorrhages) vs PDR (neovascularization).
- Hypertensive Retinopathy: Arteriolar narrowing, AV nipping, copper/silver wiring; papilledema in malignant HTN.
- CRAO: Sudden, painless, profound vision loss; cherry-red spot, box-carring. Ocular emergency.
- CRVO: Sudden, painless vision loss; "blood and thunder" fundus (diffuse hemorrhages, disc edema).
- BRVO: Most common at AV crossings (superotemporal); linked to HTN, arteriosclerosis.
- ROP: Premature infants, oxygen toxicity; peripheral avascular retina, neovascularization, risk of retinal detachment.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app