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Table of Contents

Top 5 Ophthalmic Emergencies Every GP Should Recognize

Ophthalmic emergencies require rapid recognition and urgent referral to prevent vision loss. Understanding key clinical signs allows primary care providers to act quickly and ensure timely specialist management.

Table of Contents

Ophthalmic emergencies can present suddenly and may lead to permanent vision loss if not recognised and managed promptly. In primary care, early identification of key warning signs and timely referral are critical in preserving vision and preventing complications. Understanding the most common ophthalmic emergencies and their clinical features allows for rapid decision-making and appropriate escalation.

In general practice and emergency medicine, eye complaints account for up to 3% of all consultations — yet a small percentage of these represent sight- or even life-threatening emergencies. The difference between recovery and irreversible blindness often lies in a few key decisions made at first contact.

This practical guide outlines the five most critical ophthalmic emergencies every GP should recognize, what to look for, and what immediate steps to take before referral.

  • Sudden, painless, profound loss of vision in one eye
  • Onset often upon waking or during exertion
  • Relative afferent pupillary defect (RAPD) present
  • Fundoscopy: pale retina, cherry-red fovea, narrowed arterioles
  • May have history of hypertension, diabetes, or carotid disease

Pathophysiology:
Blockage of the central retinal artery (usually embolic) leads to retinal ischemia and cell death within 90–120 minutes.

  • Record visual acuity and pupils (both eyes).
  • Call ophthalmology and neurology immediately — treat as a stroke equivalent.
  • Check blood pressure, glucose, and cardiac rhythm.
  • Initiate stroke protocol: consider urgent carotid imaging and ECG.
  • If ophthalmology not immediately available, brief measures such as ocular massage or acetazolamide (500 mg PO/IV) may be attempted — but must not delay referral.

CRAO = ocular stroke. Urgent multidisciplinary management is essential for vision and systemic outcomes.

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  • Sudden, severe eye pain often radiating to the head or jaw
  • Blurred vision, halos around lights
  • Nausea, vomiting, and malaise (often misdiagnosed as migraine or gastroenteritis)
  • Eye is red, cornea steamy, pupil mid-dilated and fixed
  • Globe feels rock hard on gentle palpation

Pathophysiology:
Blockage of aqueous outflow through the trabecular meshwork causes rapid intraocular pressure (IOP) rise and ischemic damage to the optic nerve.

  • Do not delay referral — this is a true emergency.
  • Avoid mydriatic drops or patching the eye.
  • If specialist access is delayed:
    • Acetazolamide 500 mg PO or IV (if not contraindicated)
    • Topical timolol 0.5% and apraclonidine 0.5%, if available
    • Control pain and nausea
  • Arrange same-hour ophthalmology review for laser iridotomy or medical decompression.

A red, painful eye with blurred vision and systemic symptoms = acute glaucoma until proven otherwise.

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  • Sudden onset of flashes (photopsia), floaters, or “a shadow” in the peripheral vision
  • May progress to a dark curtain or veil
  • Vision typically painless but progressively lost
  • Fundoscopy: detached retina appears grey, mobile, and undulating

Pathophysiology:
Retinal separation from the retinal pigment epithelium — usually from a retinal tear allowing vitreous fluid to accumulate underneath.

  • Do not apply pressure to the globe.
  • Check visual acuity and confrontational fields.
  • Keep the patient upright and still (reduces retinal spread).
  • Urgent same-day referral to ophthalmology.
  • If macula still attached (“macula-on detachment”), surgical repair within 24 hours gives best outcomes.

  • Sudden showers of floaters
  • Photopsia in low light
  • Monocular field loss

Any “flashes and floaters” in a high-risk patient (myopia, trauma, diabetic retinopathy) = same-day referral.

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  • Painful red eye, photophobia, tearing, foreign-body sensation
  • Blurred vision or white spot on the cornea
  • Often contact-lens related, especially overnight wearers
  • Fluorescein staining: focal corneal infiltrate/ulcer, epithelial defect, surrounding edema

Pathophysiology:
Microbial invasion (commonly Pseudomonas in lens wearers, Staph aureus or fungi post-trauma) leads to stromal necrosis and potential perforation.

  • Urgent ophthalmology referral — same day.
  • Never patch the eye or use topical steroids.
  • Stop contact lens use immediately.
  • If referral delayed:
    • Start topical fluoroquinolone (ciprofloxacin 0.3% or ofloxacin 0.3%) hourly.
  • Educate patient on hygiene, risk of perforation, and need for cultures.

Pain + corneal opacity = never just “pink eye.” Always treat as an emergency.

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  • Severe ocular pain, rapid vision loss, redness, photophobia
  • Often occurs days after intraocular surgery, intravitreal injection, or penetrating trauma
  • Slit-lamp/ophthalmic exam: hypopyon, vitritis, reduced red reflex

Pathophysiology:
Bacterial or fungal infection within the vitreous cavity causes widespread inflammation and irreversible tissue destruction.

  • Emergency ophthalmology contact — this is a true sight-threatening emergency.
  • Do not delay for imaging or systemic antibiotics (intravitreal therapy needed).
  • Record vision and note timing of recent ocular procedures.
  • If discharge or culture collection possible before transfer, do so.

Any post-surgical patient with pain, redness, or cloudy vision = endophthalmitis until proven otherwise.

ConditionKey SignsImmediate ActionWhy It Matters
CRAOSudden painless vision loss, cherry-red spotUrgent ophthal/neuro referral, stroke protocolRetinal infarction in <2 h
Angle-Closure GlaucomaPain, halos, nausea, firm eyeAcetazolamide 500 mg + same-hour referralOptic nerve ischemia
Retinal DetachmentFlashes, floaters, curtainProtect eye, same-day surgical referralPrevents macular loss
Corneal UlcerPain, opacity, photophobiaStop lenses, no steroids, urgent referralPrevents corneal melt
EndophthalmitisPost-op pain, vision loss, hypopyonEmergency referral, no delayIntraocular sepsis
  • Always test visual acuity — even grossly reduced vision matters for triage.
  • Check pupils for RAPD; document red reflex when visible.
  • Don’t be misled by minimal redness — CRAO and detachment can look quiet.
  • Avoid topical steroids unless prescribed by ophthalmology.
  • If unsure: “When in doubt, phone and refer out.”

The eye is the only part of the central nervous system directly visible to clinicians — and the window of opportunity for vision rescue is often minutes to hours. For each of these five emergencies, rapid recognition and immediate referral are the difference between full recovery and irreversible blindness.

Early, confident escalation from general practice or casualty care can save sight and preserve quality of life.

Prompt identification and referral are essential in managing ophthalmic emergencies and protecting patient vision.

Dr Roelof Cronjé

Expert eye doctor offering advanced treatment for vision problems with care and precision.

Schedule an appointment with Dr Cronjé

Appointments →

Call Us At:
013 243 1632 or 086 166 4664

Queries →

Email Us At:
office@drcronje.com

Office Hours

Mon - Fri: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Sat: By Appointment Only

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