Anisocoria: What Is It?

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ANISOCORIA

October 2004, Hotel Satya Ashoka, Dinner meet. Speaker - Dr Urvashi


Sharma

What is it?
Difference in the size of the 2 pupils

The abnormal pupil may be constricted


The abnormal pupil may be dilated

The abnormal pupil is constricted...

Unilateral use of miotic eye drops.


Iritis (Pain, redness, photophobia, anterior chamber cells, flare,
occasionally hypopion).
Horner's syndrome - mild ptosis on the side of the small pupil; positive
cocaine test.
Argyll Robertson pupil - Tertiary syphilis; the pupil is irregular in
shape, reacts poorly or not at all to light, constricts normally during
convergence. Although the disease is usually bilateral, a mild degree of
anisocoria is often present. Positive syphilis serology (FTA-ABS).
Long standing Adie's pupil - initially dilated, but constricts over time.
Seen to react slowly and irregularly to a bright light. It is supersensitive
to pilocarpine 0.125% (one part of pilocarpine 1% with 7 parts BSS).

The abnormal pupil is dilated...

Traumatized iris sphincter muscle (torn pupillary margin or iris


transillumination defects seen on slit-lamp examination).
Adie's tonic pupil (the pupil is irregular, reacts minimally to light and
slowly to convergence, but is supersensitive to weak cholinergic agents
like pilocarpine 0.125%).
III nerve palsy - the pupil does not react to weak cholinergics, but
constircts to regular strength miotic drops (e.g. 1% pilocarpine).
Unilateral use of a mydriatic drop/ointment - if instilled recently the
pupil will not react to pilocarpine 1%. If the effect is wearing off (1-2
weeks) the pupil may be semi-dilated and partly reacting to
pilocarpine.
Unilateral optic nerve disease - atrophy (primary and secondary),
neuritis, etc. - associated with reduced vision and/or abnormal visual
fields, perception of color.

Physiologic anisocoria...

Pupil size disparity is the same in light and dark.


The pupils react normally to light.
The pupils constrict normally on convergence.
The size difference is usually, but not always 1 mm in diameter.

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

(image taken from the web)

Symptoms

Unilateral
Droopy eyelid
Pupil size disparity
Often asymptomatic

Signs

Anisocoria that is greater in dim illumination (especially during the first


few seconds the room light is dimmed) because of a small pupil that
does not dilates as well as the normal, larger pupil.
Usually, mild ptosis and lower lid elevation ("reverse ptosis") occur on
the same side as the small pupil.
Lower intraocular pressure.
Iris heterochromia (lighter iris color in congenital cases).
Anhidrosis.
Increased accommodation in the affected eye.
Light and near reactions are normal.

Etiology… 1

First-order neuron disorder:


Stroke
Tumor
Severe osteoarthritis on the neck with bony spurs.
Second-order neuron disorder:
Tumor
Lung carcinoma, Pancoast tumor
Metastases
Thyroid adenoma
Neurofibroma
In children consider
Neuroblastoma, lymphoma or metastasis
Third-order neuron disorder:
Cluster headaches
Raeder's paratrigeminal syndrome
Internal carotid dissection
Herpes zoster virus
Otitis media
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
Congenital Horner's syndrome - traumatic delivery at birth.

Workup

If the diagnosis is uncertain - do a cocaine 1% test (as mentioned earlier) (A


Horner's pupil dilates less well than a normal pupil)

Hydroxyamphetamine 1% is used to identify a III order neuron


disorder:
One drop of 1% hydroxyamphetamine into each eye, repeat after one
minute.
Check pupils after 30 minutes.
The Horner's pupil fails to dilate to an equivalent degree as the fellow
eye.
Hydroxyamphetamine must not be administered within 24 hours of
cocaine - they interfere with each others actions
Both tests need an intact corneal epithelium and no prior drop
administration for accurate results.

What is the duration of the syndrome?

New onset Horner's syndrome requires a more extensive diagnostic work up.

An old case is more likely benign.

History - Headaches, arm-pain, previous stroke, surgery that may have


damaged the sympathetic chain - including cardiac, thoracic, thyroid or neck
surgery.

History of head and neck trauma.

Check for supraclavicular nodes, thyroid enlargement or a neck mass.

Investigations

CT Scan of chest to evaluate lung apex for possible mass.

MRI - brain and neck.

TLC, DLC
MRA of head/neck

Carotid doppler ultrasound if carotid artery dissection is suspected

Lymph node biopsy if lymphadenopathy is present

Treatment

Treatment is directed towards the underlying cause, refer to the concerned


specialist.

Cosmesis - Ptosis surgery.

Acute Horner's syndrome should be worked up as soon as possible to rule


out life-threatening causes.

Chronic Horner's syndrome can be evaluated with less urgency.

With the exception of possible amblyopia in children, which occurs only


when the eyelid covers the visual axis, there are no ocular complications that
necessitate close follow up.

2. Argyll Robertson Pupils

Symptoms

Asymptomatic

Signs

Small, irregular pupils that exhibit "light-near" dissociation (react


poorly or not at all to light but constrict normally during convergence).
Vision is normal.
The pupils do not dilate well.
May initially be unilateral, but always becomes bilateral, although
possibly asymmetric.

Etiology

Tertiary syphilis

Differential Diagnosis

All causes of anisocoria


Other causes of "light-near" dissociation:
Bilateral optic neuropathy or severe retinopathy (visual acuity is
reduced, pupil size is normal)
Adie's tonic pupil (unilateral or bilateral irregularly dilated pupil that
constricts slowly and unevenly to light; normal vision)
Dorsal midbrain (Perinaud's syndrome) - normal to large pupils
accompanied by convergence-retraction nystagmus and supranuclear
gaze palsy.

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.

Look for interstitial keratitis.

Search for chorioretinitis, papillitis and uveitis.

FTA-ABS or MHA-TP, rapid plasma reagin (RPR) or venereal disease


research laboratories (VDRL) test.
Consider a lumbar puncture if the diagnosis of syphilis is established.

Treatment

The decision to treat is based on whether active disease is present and


whether the patient has been treated appropriately in the past.

In case active syphilis is uncovered the patient may be referred to the


specialist.

3. Adie's Tonic Pupil

Symptoms

(image taken from the web)

Difference in the size of the pupils.


Blurred vision.
May be asymptomatic.

Signs

An irregularly dilated pupil exhibiting minimal or no reaction to light.


Slow constriction to convergence.
Slow redilatation.
Typically unilateral at first.
Found most often in young women.
It may develop acutely and may become bilateral.
Pupil dilates normally to mydriatic agents.
Deep tendon reflexes (knees and ankles) are often absent (Adie's
syndrome).
The involved pupil may become smaller than the normal pupil over
time.
Super-sensitivity to weak cholinergic agents (0.125% pilocarpine) may
not be present in the acute phase but will appear a few weeks later.

Etiology

Idiopathic

Orbital trauma or infection, herpes zoster infection, diabetes, autonomic


neuropathies, Gullain-Barre syndrome, others.

Differential diagnosis

Other causes of anisocoria mentioned earlier.


Note: Parinaud's syndrome may produce bilateral mid-dilated pupils that react
poorly to light but constrict normally during convergence (that is, not tonic).
Eyelid retraction and paralysis of upgaze with retraction nystagmus may
additionally be present. A pinealoma or other midbrain anomaly must be ruled
out by MRI.

Workup

Observe the suspect pupil on a slit lamp, shining a bright light on it. The
Adie's pupil will constrict slowly and irregularly.

Test for a super-sensitive pupil (pilocarpine 0.125%):

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.

Recheck the pupil size after 10-15 minutes.

The tonic pupil constricts significantly more than the contralateral pupil in
Adie's syndrome.

The dilute pilocarpine test may occasionally be positive in an Argyll


Robertson pupil and in familial dysautonomia.

If Adie's pupil or super-sensitivity or both are present and the patient is


younger than 1 year, refer the patient to a pediatric neurologist to rule out
familial dysautonomia (Riley-Day Syndrome).

Treatment

Pilocarpine 0.125% 4 times a day for cosmesis and to aid in accommodation if


desired.

4. Isolated III nerve palsy

Symptoms

Double vision that disappears when one eye is closed.

Droopy eyelid.

With or without pain.

Signs

EXTERNAL OPHTHALMOPLEGIA

Complete: Limitation of ocular movement in all fields of gaze except temporal


(LR6, SO4, rest 3)
Incomplete: partial limitation of movements.

Superior division palsy: Ptosis and inability to look up.


Inferior division palsy: Inability to look nasally or inferiorly; pupil is
involved.

INTERNAL OPHTHALMOPLEGIA

Pupil involving: A fixed, dilated or minimally reactive pupil.

Pupil sparing: Pupil not dilated and normally reactive to light.

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

Common cause - Aneurysm (particularly a PCA aneurysm)


Less common - DM or HT, tumour, trauma, congenital.
Rare - Uncal herniation, cavernous sinus mass/lesion, pituitary apoplexy,
orbital disease, herpes zoster, leukemia and ophthalmoplegic migraine.

PUPIL SPARING

Ischemic microvascular disease (HT, DM), rarely cavernous sinus syndrome,


giant cell arteritis (GCA).

RELATIVE PUPIL SPARING

Ischemic microvascular disease (HT, DM), less likely aneurysm.

ABERRANT REGENRATION PRESENT

Not microvascular (trauma, aneurysm, tumour, congenital).

Differential diagnosis

Myasthenia gravis (and Ocular myasthenia)

Pupil not involved, increased eyelid droop after sustained upgaze


Weak orbicularis oculi muscle
Positive edrophonium test

Thyroid eye disease

Lid lag, stare, injection over rectus muscles, proptosis, resistance on


forced duction testing, abnormal CT orbits, no ptosis.

Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO)

Bilateral slowly progressive ptosis, limitation of ocular motility, pupil


spared, often no diplopia.

Pseudotumor orbit

Pain and proptosis are usually present.

Internuclear Ophthalmoplegia

Unilateral or bilateral adduction deficit with horizontal nystagmus of


opposite abducting eye.
No ptosis.

Lesion in ipsilateral brainstem medial longitudinal fasciculus.

Skew deviation

Supranuclear brainstem lesion

Asymmetric mainly vertical ocular deviation not consistent with single


cranial nerve defect.

Parinaud's syndrome

Dorsal midbrain lesion

Inability to look up, pupil reacts slowly to light briskly to convergence,


no ptosis, eyelid retraction.

Convergence-retraction nystagmus . BILATERAL

GCA

Extraocular muscle ischemia causing nonspecific motility defects.


Pupil not involved.
Age > 50, associated systemic symptoms.

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

Full neurological examination - assess all other cranial nerves:

Ipsilateral IV cranial nerve -

Focus with a slit lamp on a superior conjunctival blood vessel


Ask the patient to look down and nasally
The eye should intort, the blood vessel should turn down and toward
the nose.

Immediate imaging (MRI brain) to rule out mass/aneurysm:

In pupil involving III nerve palsies


In pupil sparing III nerve palsies as under
Age < 50 (no history of DM, HT)
Patients with progressing partial III nerve palsies
III nerve palsy > 3 months in duration, condition not improving
Additional cranial nerve involvement, or neurological abnormalities

All patients who develop aberrant regeneration, with the exception of


regeneration after traumatic III nerve palsies.

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.

CBC with differential in children (leukemia)

Tensilon (edrophonium) test when myasthenia is suspect (pupil is not


involved)

Blood pressure in suspected ischemic disease

ESR in GCA

Treatment

Directed towards the underlying pathology

In case of symptomatic diplopia an occlusion patch may be placed over the


involved eye.

Patching is not done under 9 years of age (amblyopia may develop)

Children must be monitored closely for development of amblyopia in the


deviated eye.

FOLLOW UP

Observe daily for 5-7 days from onset for delayed pupil involvement.

Then check every 4-6 weeks.

If III nerve function is not regained by 3 months or develops other


neurological signs, or aberrant regeneration, MRI is indicated.

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