Improving the Telemedicine Evaluation of Patients With Acute Vision Loss
A Call to Eyes
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Abstract
Acute vision loss related to cerebral or retinal ischemia is a time-sensitive emergency with potential treatment options including IV or intra-arterial thrombolysis and mechanical thrombectomy. However, patients either present in a delayed fashion or present to an emergency department that lacks the subspecialty expertise to recognize and treat these conditions in a timely fashion. Moreover, health care systems in the United States are becoming increasingly reliant on telestroke and teleneurology services for acute neurologic care, making the accurate diagnosis of acute vision loss even more challenging due to critical limitations to the remote video evaluation, including the inability to perform routine ophthalmoscopy. The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a greater reliance on telemedicine services and helped to accelerate the development of novel tools and care pathways to improve remote ophthalmologic evaluation, but these tools have yet to be adapted for use in the remote evaluation of acute vision loss. Permanent vision loss can be disabling for patients, and efforts must be made to increase and improve early diagnosis and management. Herein, the authors outline the importance of improving acute ophthalmologic diagnosis, outline key limitations and barriers to the current video-based teleneurology assessments, highlight opportunities to leverage new tools to enhance the remote assessment of vision loss, and propose new avenues to improve access to emergent ophthalmology subspecialty.
Glossary
- AHA=
- American Heart Association;
- AR=
- augmented reality;
- ASA=
- American Stroke Association;
- CRAO=
- central retinal artery occlusion;
- HMD=
- head-mounted display;
- NIHSS=
- NIH Stroke Scale;
- OCT=
- optical coherence tomography;
- tPA=
- tissue plasminogen activator;
- VR=
- virtual reality
Footnotes
Go to Neurology.org/N for full disclosures. Funding information and disclosures deemed relevant by the authors, if any, are provided at the end of the article.
Submitted and externally peer reviewed. The handling editor was Rebecca Burch, MD.
- Received March 16, 2022.
- Accepted in final form May 26, 2022.
- © 2022 American Academy of Neurology
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