1). What to do if idiopathic iritis worsens in 72 hours?
Ans: Consult
2). What to do if episcleritis worsens in 72 hours?
Ans: Consult
3). What to do if infammatory keratits worsens in 72 hours?
Ans: Consult
4). What to do if traumatic iritis worsen in 72 hours?
Ans: Consult
5). What to do if hsv, hzv (conjunctivitis, dermatitis) worsen after 1 week?
Ans: Consult
6). What to do if idiopathic iritis has not resolved by 3 weeks?
Ans: Consult
7). What to do if episcleritis has not resolved by 3 weeks?
Ans: Consult
PaperStoc.com Page 1 of 11
, 8). When to ask for consult for episcleritis?
Ans: If worse after 72 hours
or
Not resolved by 3 weeks
or
Reoccurence w/in 1 year
9). When to ask for consult for idiopathic iritis?
Ans: If worse after 72 hours
or
Not resolved by 3 weeks
10). When to ask for consult for inflammatory keratitis?
Ans: If worse after 72 hours
or
Reoccurrance within 1 year
11). When to ask for consult for traumatic iritis?
Ans: If worse after 72 hours
12). When to ask for consult for hsv, hzv (conjunctivitis, dermatitis)?
Ans: If worse after 1 week
13). What to do if a central corneal ulcer shows no improvement in 48 hours?
Ans: Refer
14). When to refer for a central corneal ulcer?
Ans: If not improving by 48 hours
15). What to do if dacryoadenitis shows no improvement in 48 hours?
Ans: Refer
16). When to refer for dacryoadenitis?
PaperStoc.com Page 2 of 11