Keywords
ophthalmology consults - residency - emergency department
Eye-related visits comprised 1.5% of all emergency department (ED) visits in the United
States in 2010.[1] Channa et al found that 41.2% of eye-related ED visits were diagnosed as urgent
conditions,[2] whereas Stagg et al deemed 22.6% of eye-related ED visits as urgent.[3] The most common urgent ophthalmologic conditions included corneal abrasions, eyelid
lacerations, external foreign bodies, open globes, contusion, and orbital fractures.
One longitudinal study from 2007 to 2012 found that ophthalmology consultations accounted
for 1.3% (8,179/6,28,259) of all consultations in the ED in a single large teaching
hospital.[4] Consultation services are an important component of any ophthalmology residency
training program and the ED is one of the main settings of consultation. In this study,
we set out to evaluate the nature of ophthalmology consultations in the ED and make
recommendations based on these findings to optimize training and curricula for emergency
medicine and ophthalmology residents.
Methods
This is a retrospective study of ED ophthalmology consultations at a tertiary care
hospital between January 1, 2008 and January 1, 2017. The study protocol was approved
by the Institutional Review Board of Northwestern University and this research followed
the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki. Data was extracted from the Northwestern
Medicine Enterprise Database Warehouse (NMEDW), an integrated database of Northwestern
Medicine's electronic health records.
Northwestern Memorial Hospital (NMH) is an 894-bed tertiary care hospital serving
the city of Chicago as a level one trauma center including an ED and serves as the
primary teaching hospital for the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
At this institution, ophthalmology consultations are performed by junior residents
with the opportunity to call a senior resident, fellow, or attending ophthalmologist
on-call. The NMEDW was queried for all patients 18 years of age or older with encounters
in the NMH ED that included an ophthalmology consultation designated by an ophthalmology
consultation note.
Extracted data from each of these encounters included the ED note, ophthalmology consultation
note, procedure notes, and imaging reports. The NMEDW was then queried for the first
outpatient ambulatory clinic follow-up appointment in the ophthalmology department
within 3 months of the ED visit. We analyzed the reason for consultation by the ED
physicians, the diagnosis made by the ophthalmology service (known as diagnosis made
in the ED), and the diagnosis made at the first outpatient ophthalmology visit. After-hour
consultations were defined as those received during weekdays from 5 pm to 8 am and weekends.
Encounters were excluded if there was not a completed ED ophthalmology consultation
note. A single author (MJH) evaluated all outpatient visits with discordant initial
and follow-up diagnoses to verify that the outpatient visits were follow-up due to
the ED visit. The initial and follow-up diagnoses were then compared with determine
if they were the same or discordant.
A chi-square test of independence (categorical variables) was performed to examine
the change in number of consultations over the academic year as well as the change
in accuracy of diagnoses made in the ED compared with follow-up over the academic
year. The academic year was divided into quarters beginning with July through September
to allow for comparison. Degrees of freedom were defined as (r-1)(c-1), where r = number of rows and c = number of columns. Significance was set as p < 0.05.
Results
A total of 3,583 consecutive patient encounters in the NMH ED with an ophthalmology
consultation were identified over the 9-year period. About 51.1% of patients were
female (1,831/3,583). The mean age of patients was 48.9 ± 17.7 and the range was from
18 to 98 years old ([Table 1]). There were 36 unique reasons for consultation categories identified in the ED.
The most common reasons for consultation were blurry vision/vision loss (24.8%, 889/3,583),
eye pain (17.0%, 609/3,583), and flashes/floaters (16.7%, 598/3,583) ([Table 2]). There were 63 unique diagnosis categories identified from the consultations in
the ED. The most common diagnoses made in the ED included posterior vitreous detachment
(PVD) (11.0%, 394/3,583), orbital fracture (9.2%, 330/3,583), and normal eye examination
(7.5%, 269/3,583) ([Table 2]). About 50.0% of the consultations occurred after-hours (1,792/3,583).
Table 1
Patient demographics
Gender
|
Number
|
Total (%)
|
Female
|
1,831
|
51.1
|
Male
|
1,752
|
48.9
|
Age
|
<30
|
720
|
20.1
|
30–50
|
1,136
|
31.7
|
51–65
|
1,045
|
29.2
|
66–80
|
525
|
14.7
|
81+
|
157
|
4.4
|
Table 2
Common reasons for ophthalmology consultation and diagnosis in the emergency department
Reason for consultation
|
Number (%)
|
Blurry vision/vision loss
|
887 (24.8)
|
Eye pain
|
609 (17.0)
|
Flashes/floaters
|
597(16.7)
|
Blunt trauma
|
392 (10.94)
|
Orbital fracture
|
243 (6.78)
|
Red eye
|
198 (5.5)
|
Rule out zoster
|
104 (2.9)
|
Papilledema
|
94 (2.6)
|
Foreign body
|
75 (2.1)
|
Corneal abrasion/ulcer
|
63 (2.8)
|
Diagnosis in the ED
|
Vitreous detachment
|
393 (11.0)
|
Orbital fracture
|
329 (9.2)
|
Normal eye examination
|
268 (7.5)
|
Stable eye examination
|
236 (6.6)
|
Corneal abrasion
|
196 (5.5)
|
Vitreous hemorrhage
|
119 (3.3)
|
Anterior uveitis
|
117 (3.3)
|
Retinal detachment
|
117 (3.3)
|
Corneal ulcer
|
114 (3.2)
|
Eyelid injury
|
87 (2.4)
|
Abbreviation: ED, emergency department.
Senior Assistance
A senior resident, fellow, or attending was contacted regarding the examination and/or
plan by the junior resident for 40.4% of all consultations (1,448/3,583). In the first
3 months of the academic year, the rate of the junior resident on-call consulting
with a senior resident, fellow or attending was 56.2% (545/969). This rate decreased
each consecutive quarter and was 26.7% during the last quarter of the academic year
(237/889). The difference in these rates was statistically significant (p < 0.0001) ([Table 3]). There was no significant change in the total number consultations between any
of the quarters. The most common diagnoses made in the ED that involved a more senior
ophthalmologist were retinal detachment (82%, 96/117), retinal tear (81%, 27/33),
and angle closure glaucoma (76%, 16/21) ([Table 4]).
Table 3
Consultations requiring assistance from senior resident, fellow, or attending by quarter
Months
|
Number requiring backup (%)
|
Total consultations (%)
|
July-Sept
|
545 (37.6)
|
969 (56.2)
|
Oct-Dec
|
414 (28.6)
|
958 (43.2)
|
Jan-March
|
253 (17.5)
|
767 (33.0)
|
April-June
|
237 (16.4)
|
889 (26.7)
|
Table 4
Most common diagnoses requiring assistance in the ED
Diagnosis in the ED
|
Number of total diagnoses (%)
|
Number of those requiring assistance (%)
|
Retinal detachment
|
117 (3.3)
|
96 (82.1)
|
Open globe
|
41 (1.1)
|
41 (100)
|
Retinal tear
|
33 (0.9)
|
27 (81.8)
|
Acute angle closure glaucoma
|
21 (0.6)
|
16 (76.2)
|
Endophthalmitis
|
15 (0.4)
|
11 (73.3)
|
Neovascular glaucoma
|
12 (0.3)
|
12 (100)
|
Giant cell arteritis
|
12 (0.3)
|
9 (75.0)
|
Conjunctival laceration
|
10 (0.3)
|
8 (80.0)
|
Anterior uveitis
|
6 (0.2)
|
5 (83.3)
|
Secondary glaucoma (non-neovascular)
|
4 (0.1)
|
4 (100)
|
Abbreviation: ED, emergency department.
Follow-Up
About 86.4% of patients had follow-up recommended at the end of the ED encounter.
About 63.8% of patients who were given this recommendation presented for follow-up
at NMH within the 3-month time period. About 96.2% (1,899/1,974) of the diagnoses
made during these follow-up encounters were the same as the initial diagnosis made
in the ED ([Table 5]) and there was no change in rate of concordant diagnoses over the course of the
year (p = 0.838). There was no significant difference in the rate of concordance in consultations
performed by a junior resident alone compared with those with input from a senior
resident, fellow, or attending (p = 0.866). In 75/1,974 encounters, the follow-up diagnoses in the ophthalmology clinic
were discordant with the diagnoses by the consulting ophthalmology team in the ED.
The most common discordant follow-up diagnoses were retinal tear (18.7%, 14/75), anterior
uveitis (10.7%, 8/75), and retinal detachment (9.3%, 7/75) ([Table 6]). Notably, scleritis was either an initial or follow-up diagnosis for nine of these
discordant cases.
Table 5
Accurate diagnosis in the emergency department compared with follow-up outpatient
visit
Month
|
Correct diagnosis compared with follow-up
|
Number of follow-up visits
|
Correct diagnoses (%)
|
July-Sept
|
514
|
531
|
96.8
|
Oct-Dec
|
506
|
528
|
95.8
|
Jan-March
|
412
|
428
|
96.2
|
April-June
|
467
|
487
|
95.9
|
Total
|
1635
|
1974
|
96.2
|
Table 6
Most common discordant initial and follow-up diagnoses
Diagnosis in the ED
|
Diagnosis at follow-up visit
|
Number
|
Posterior vitreous detachment
|
Retinal tear
|
5
|
Vitreous hemorrhage
|
Retinal tear
|
3
|
Hemorrhagic posterior vitreous detachment
|
Retinal tear
|
2
|
Normal eye examination (post-trauma)
|
Retinal tear
|
2
|
Traumatic iritis
|
Retinal tear
|
1
|
Scleritis
|
Anterior uveitis
|
3
|
Keratitis
|
Anterior uveitis
|
2
|
Elevated intraocular pressure (unknown cause)
|
Anterior uveitis
|
1
|
Primary open angle glaucoma
|
Anterior uveitis
|
1
|
Exposed suture
|
Anterior uveitis
|
1
|
Posterior vitreous detachment
|
Retinal detachment
|
2
|
Vitreous hemorrhage
|
Retinal detachment
|
2
|
Stable eye examination (history of BRAO)
|
Retinal detachment
|
1
|
Normal eye examination
|
Retinal detachment
|
1
|
Retinal tear
|
Retinal detachment
|
1
|
Episcleritis
|
Scleritis
|
2
|
Carotid cavernous fistula
|
Scleritis
|
1
|
Elevated intraocular pressure (unknown cause)
|
Scleritis
|
1
|
Vitreous hemorrhage
|
Posterior vitreous detachment
|
1
|
Vitreous syneresis
|
Posterior vitreous detachment
|
1
|
Normal eye examination
|
Posterior vitreous detachment
|
1
|
Abbreviations: BRAO, branch retinal artery occlusion; ED, emergency department.
Discordant Diagnoses
Given this number of patients with discordant initial and follow-up diagnoses, we
further evaluated the most common discordant follow-up diagnoses ([Table 6]). Of the 14 patients who had a discordant follow-up diagnosis of retinal tear, five
had an initial diagnosis of PVD, three were initially diagnosed with vitreous hemorrhage,
and two were initially diagnosed with hemorrhagic PVD. Two of the remaining three
patients were initially presenting for evaluation after trauma with normal dilated
posterior eye examinations noted. There were seven patients diagnosed with retinal
detachments at their follow-up visit. The most common corresponding ED diagnoses were
two with PVD, two with vitreous hemorrhage, two with stable eye examinations, and
one with a retinal tear. Of the eight patients who had a follow-up diagnosis of anterior
uveitis, three were initially diagnosed with scleritis and two with keratitis.
Consultations Leading to Procedures
Overall, 461 of the 3,583 patients (12.7%) had some type of procedure done by the
ophthalmology service ([Table 5]). Of these procedures, 188 were performed in the operating room (40.8%), 164 in
the ED (35.6%), 109 in the outpatient clinic (23.6%), and 4 in the inpatient setting
at the bedside (0.86%). The most common procedures done overall were lid laceration
repairs (21.5%), pars plana vitrectomy (14.6%), and laser retinopexy (12.6%) ([Table 7]). In our study, 329 patients were diagnosed with an orbital fracture and 73 (22.2%)
of those patients underwent a repair procedure, most often by services other than
ophthalmology.
Table 7
Most common procedures by the ophthalmology service in the ED, OR, and clinic
ED (164)
|
OR (188)
|
Clinic (109)
|
Eyelid repair—91
|
Pars plana vitrectomy—68
|
Laser retinopexy—59
|
Foreign body removal—34
|
Open globe—41
|
Laser iridotomy—14
|
Vitreous tap and injection—8
|
Eyelid repair—11
|
Foreign body removal—5
|
Canthotomy cantholysis—4
|
Cataract surgery—10
|
Peripheral retinopexy—5
|
Corneal debridement—3
|
Orbital fracture repair—7
|
Suture removal—2
|
Abbreviations: ED, emergency department; OR, operating room.
Discussion
Subspecialty consultation provides timely, expert recommendations and treatment, as
well as learning opportunities for both consulting and consulted trainees. The most
common reasons for consultation were blurry vision/vision loss, eye pain, and flashes/floaters
([Table 2]). The most common diagnoses made in the ED included PVD, orbital fracture, and normal
eye examination ([Table 2]). We recommend early training of ophthalmology residents in the examination techniques
required to evaluate and diagnose these common problems, and that appropriate equipment
to be available in the ED to perform an examination. We found a significant decrease
in the rate of assistance sought by junior ophthalmology residents from the first
3 months compared with the last 3 months of the academic year (37.6%, 545/969 vs 16.4%,
237/889).
Consultations Leading to Procedures
This study also provides information about the types of procedures that originate
in the ED with 12.7% of all consultations leading to procedures (461/3583). Ophthalmology
residents can expect to perform eyelid laceration repairs frequently (2.54%, 91/3583)
when they receive a consultation from the ED, as well as foreign body removals, vitreous
tap and injections for endophthalmitis, laser retinopexies, and laser iridotomies.
Thus, an early focus should be placed on teaching ophthalmology residents how to recognize
the need for and how to perform these procedures under supervision. Other common procedure
types (pars plana vitrectomy, repair of open globe) require a fellow or an attending.
However, ophthalmology residents should be trained to identify the diagnoses prompting
these procedures to appropriately call for backup in a timely manner.
Diagnostic Accuracy
The rate of accurate diagnosis in the ED by the consulting ophthalmology resident
compared with the final diagnosis made by the attending ophthalmologist at the first
follow-up clinic visit was consistent throughout the academic year (98.3%, 952/969,
July through September vs 97.8%, 869/889, April through June). Meanwhile, the rate
of the junior resident requesting staffing of consultations with a senior resident,
fellow, or attending ophthalmologist decreased significantly over the academic year
(37.6%, 545/969, July through September vs 16.4%, 237/889, April through June). This
is likely a reflection of the junior residents becoming more knowledgeable and proficient
as the year progresses. The consultations that required the junior ophthalmology resident
to seek assistance were more likely to be rarer diagnoses and those requiring a procedure.
However, the most common discordant initial and follow-up diagnoses (retinal tears,
anterior uveitis, and retinal detachments) were among the most common diagnoses overall.
We found that the rate of accuracy did not improve when looking only at those encounters
that the junior resident sought assistance.
Educational Aims
Many of our findings provide guidance to design eye-related curricula for medical
students, emergency medicine residents, and ophthalmology residents, particularly
in the areas of evaluation, diagnosis, and performance of procedures in the setting
of ED consultation. The disorders listed in [Table 2] suggest high yield topics to focus on the diagnosis and management of these common
reasons for consultation and final diagnoses. Interpretation of our findings would
also suggest emergency medicine residents being comfortable with the anterior segment
slit lamp examination, including differentiating corneal abrasion, corneal ulcers,
and anterior uveitis, given these being in the top 10 most common final diagnoses
([Table 2]). Ophthalmology residents performing consultations should be able to recognize,
and in many cases, perform procedures either in the ED, the ophthalmology clinic,
or operating room. The most common procedures in the ED were found to be eyelid repair,
foreign body removal, and vitreous tap and injections for endophthalmitis; all of
which are skills that should be taught early in an ophthalmology residency training
program. Common procedures that were performed in the ophthalmology clinic were laser
retinopexy and iridotomy. The most common surgery performed as a result of ED consultation
was pars plana vitrectomy, followed by repair of open globe. Residency programs should
ensure that residents performing ED consultations have a thorough knowledge of the
examination skills and surgical indications for conditions requiring these procedures.
Given our findings of discordant follow-up diagnoses, a high level of suspicion should
be maintained when making the diagnosis of PVD or vitreous hemorrhage, though most
of these diagnoses were accurate. Furthermore, these diagnoses should prompt good
follow-up and thorough counseling of patients on warning signs of an occult or subsequent
retinal tear. Of note, our rate of retinal tears diagnosed only at the follow-up visit
after initial diagnosis of PVD in the ED was 1.78% (7/393). The published rate of
spontaneous retinal tear after initial diagnosis of PVD by attending ophthalmologists
is 1.8% (range, 0.9–3.2%).[5] This rate is similar to our discordant rate, suggesting many of the seven discordant
diagnosed retinal tears represent the natural history of a small percentage of patients
with PVD developing retinal tears.
This study has important limitations. Patients following up with ophthalmologists
outside of our institution lowered the amount of follow-up ophthalmology clinic notes
that are available for this study. However, a similar follow-up rate of 60.0% (compared
with 62.8% at our institution) from eye-related ED visits was found in a prior study.[6] Other studies have noted even lower follow-up rates (43.2%) and found that lack
of insurance or lack of visual symptoms correlated with poor rates of follow-up visits.[7] Additionally, changes in the classification of consultation notes and ED encounters
since the onset of EMR may have led to some missed patients. However, we worked closely
with the NWEDW informatics analysts to collect as many patient encounters as possible.
Identifying the most common diagnoses for eye-related ED visits can be helpful to
guide the education of both emergency medicine and ophthalmology trainees. By focusing
on teaching common presentations earlier in the course of training, ophthalmology
residents will be better prepared to handle these consultations. Furthermore, emergency
medicine residents can be similarly prepared to triage and treat conditions with less
reliance on the ophthalmology consultation service. Finally, using this information,
medical schools can tailor their ophthalmology curricula to focus on diagnosis and
management of the common ophthalmologic disorders seen in the ED.