Anisocoria: What Is It?
Anisocoria: What Is It?
Anisocoria: What Is It?
What is it?
Difference in the size of the 2 pupils
Physiologic anisocoria...
Workup - History
When was the anisocoria noted?
Any associated symptoms or signs?
History of ocular trauma?
Use of any ocular/systemic medications?
History of syphilis?
History of reduced vision?
Old photographs?
Ocular examination
The trickiest part - determining which is the abnormal sized pupil?
Younger patients tend to have a pupillary size of 4-5 mm. Whereas
elderly patients have slightly smaller pupils.
Compare the pupil sizes in light and dark.
Anisocoria greater in light suggests the abnormal pupil is the
larger pupil.
Anisocoria greater in dark suggests the abnormal pupil is the
smaller pupil.
Check the IOP.
Low in Horner's syndrome
High in Glaucoma
Test the pupillary reaction to light.
Test convergence if the reaction to light is normal.
Look for ptosis.
Evaluate ocular motility.
Examine the pupillary margin with a slit lamp.
Inference
If the abnormal pupil is small, a diagnosis of Horner's syndrome may be
confirmed by a cocaine test (10% cocaine eye drops are instilled twice
at an interval of one minute. A Horner's pupil dilates less well than the
normal pupil in about 15 minutes time).
In the presence of ptosis and an unequivocal increase in anisocoria in
dim illumination, a cocaine test is not needed because the diagnosis can
be made clinically.
If the abnormal pupil is large and there is no sphincter muscle damage
or signs of III nerve palsy (extraocular motility defect, ptosis) -
The pupils are tested with one drop of pilocarpine 0.125%; If the
pupil contricts significantly more than the normal pupil in 10 to
15 minutes an Adie's tonic pupil is diagnosed.
If the pupil does not constrict with pilocarpine 0.125% or
pharmacological dilatation is suspected, or both…
Pilocarpine 1% is instilled in both eyes.
A normal pupil constricts sooner and to a greater extent
than the pharmacologically dilated pupil.
An eye that recently received a strong mydriatic agent such
as atropine usually will not constrict at all.
Specific entities
1. Horner's syndrome
Symptoms
Unilateral
Droopy eyelid
Pupil size disparity
Often asymptomatic
Signs
Etiology… 1
Workup
New onset Horner's syndrome requires a more extensive diagnostic work up.
Investigations
TLC, DLC
MRA of head/neck
Treatment
Symptoms
Asymptomatic
Signs
Etiology
Tertiary syphilis
Differential Diagnosis
Workup
Test the pupillary reaction to light & convergence - for convergence, patients
are asked to look first at a distant target and then at their own finger, which
the examiner holds in front of them and slowly brings it toward their face.
Treatment
Symptoms
Signs
Etiology
Idiopathic
Differential diagnosis
Workup
Observe the suspect pupil on a slit lamp, shining a bright light on it. The
Adie's pupil will constrict slowly and irregularly.
Have the patient fixate at a distance and measure the pupil size of each eye,
then instill one drop of pilocarpine 0.125% in each eye.
The tonic pupil constricts significantly more than the contralateral pupil in
Adie's syndrome.
Treatment
Symptoms
Droopy eyelid.
Signs
EXTERNAL OPHTHALMOPLEGIA
INTERNAL OPHTHALMOPLEGIA
Relative pupil sparing: Pupil partially dilated and sluggishly reactive to light.
Other signs
Exotropia or hypotropia.
Aberrant regeneration
Elevation of the upper eyelid with gaze down or nasally
Sometimes pupil constricts (segmental) when looking up, down or
nasally
Aberrant regeneration may occur spontaneously (primary regeneration)
without a preceding III nerve palsy.
This is usually caused by a cavernous sinus tumour or aneurysm.
Etiology
PUPIL INVOLVING
PUPIL SPARING
Differential diagnosis
Pseudotumor orbit
Internuclear Ophthalmoplegia
Skew deviation
Parinaud's syndrome
GCA
Workup
Onset and duration of diplopia? Recent trauma? DM, HT? Known cancer or
CNS mass? Recent infections?
Ocular examination:
Pupil reactions
Eye movements
Ptosis
Proptosis
Visual field defects
Orbicularis and eyelid fatigue on sustained upgaze
Look for signs of aberrant regeneration
Imaging is usually not required in pupil sparing III nerve palsies that do not
fit these criteria, especially when patients have known vasculopathic factors
such as DM or HT
Cerebral angiography is indicated for all patients older than 10 years with
pupil involving III nerve palsies and whose imaging study is normal or shows
a mass consistent with aneurysm.
ESR in GCA
Treatment
FOLLOW UP
Observe daily for 5-7 days from onset for delayed pupil involvement.