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    Subjects/Ophthalmology/Hypertensive Retinopathy
    Hypertensive Retinopathy
    medium
    eye Ophthalmology

    A 52-year-old woman with a 15-year history of hypertension on irregular antihypertensive therapy presents with complaints of floaters and blurred vision for 1 week. Her blood pressure is 172/108 mmHg. On dilated fundoscopy, you observe superficial flame-shaped hemorrhages in the superior temporal quadrant, several cotton-wool spots, and scattered hard exudates. The optic disc margins appear sharp and well-defined. Serum creatinine is 1.0 mg/dL and urinalysis is normal. What is the most appropriate classification of her hypertensive retinopathy?

    A. Grade 1 (mild hypertensive retinopathy)
    B. Grade 3 (severe hypertensive retinopathy)
    C. Grade 4 (malignant hypertensive retinopathy)
    D. Grade 2 (moderate hypertensive retinopathy)

    Explanation

    ## Diagnosis: Grade 3 Hypertensive Retinopathy (Severe, Non-Malignant) ### Keith-Wagener-Barker Grading System | Grade | Retinal Findings | Systemic Features | Prognosis | |-------|------------------|-------------------|----------| | **1** | Arteriolar narrowing, AV nicking | Mild HTN | Excellent | | **2** | Grade 1 + focal arteriolar spasm | Moderate HTN | Good | | **3** | Grade 2 + flame hemorrhages, cotton-wool spots, hard exudates | Severe HTN | Fair (5-year survival ~50%) | | **4** | Grade 3 + **papilledema** | **Hypertensive emergency** | Poor (1-year mortality ~50% if untreated) | ### Why This Patient Is Grade 3, Not Grade 4 **Key Point:** The **absence of papilledema** is the critical distinguishing feature. Despite having flame hemorrhages, cotton-wool spots, and hard exudates (all Grade 3 findings), the **sharp, well-defined optic disc margins** rule out Grade 4. **High-Yield:** Papilledema = optic disc edema visible as blurred margins, hyperemia, and elevation. Its presence mandates Grade 4 classification and signals a **hypertensive emergency** requiring ICU admission and aggressive BP management. ### Pathophysiology of Grade 3 Findings 1. **Flame-shaped hemorrhages** — rupture of superficial retinal arterioles due to acute arterial necrosis; located in nerve fiber layer 2. **Cotton-wool spots** — nerve fiber layer infarcts from arteriolar occlusion and ischemia 3. **Hard exudates** — lipid and plasma protein exudation from damaged capillaries; typically in clusters or macular star pattern 4. **Normal renal function** (Cr 1.0) and **normal urinalysis** — no acute glomerulonephritis; distinguishes from malignant hypertension **Clinical Pearl:** The **absence of end-organ damage** (normal renal function, no proteinuria, no papilledema) confirms this is severe but chronic hypertensive retinopathy, not an acute hypertensive emergency. ### Management Approach for Grade 3 1. **Gradual BP reduction** — target 140–150/90–100 mmHg over weeks (avoid rapid reduction, which risks stroke) 2. **Optimize antihypertensive regimen** — ensure compliance; consider ACE inhibitor or ARB for renal protection 3. **Ophthalmology follow-up** — repeat fundoscopy in 4–6 weeks to assess response 4. **Systemic evaluation** — ECG, lipid profile, glucose; assess for coronary artery disease and left ventricular hypertrophy 5. **Lifestyle modification** — sodium restriction, weight loss, exercise **Mnemonic — CHAFE for Grade 3 vs Grade 4:** - **C**otton-wool spots ✓ (both grades) - **H**emorrhages (flame) ✓ (both grades) - **A**rteriolar changes ✓ (both grades) - **F**ibrosis/exudates ✓ (both grades) - **E**dema of disc (papilledema) ✗ (Grade 4 only) ### Why Not Grade 4? Grade 4 requires **papilledema** (optic disc edema). This patient has a **normal optic disc**, ruling out Grade 4. Grade 4 would also typically present with acute kidney injury, proteinuria, and systemic signs of hypertensive emergency (headache, chest pain, neurological symptoms). ### Why Not Grade 2? Grade 2 features are limited to focal arteriolar spasm superimposed on Grade 1 changes (arteriolar narrowing and AV nicking). This patient has **flame hemorrhages, cotton-wool spots, and hard exudates** — all Grade 3 features. Grade 2 does not include these hemorrhagic and exudative changes. [cite:Khurana Ophthalmology Ch 8; Park 26e Ch 3]

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