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How should I manage a patient presenting with sudden vision loss and a suspected retinal detachment in primary care?
Answer
Guideline-Aligned (High Confidence)
Generated by iatroX. Developer: Dr Kola Tytler MBBS CertHE MBA MRCGP (General Practitioner).
Last reviewed: 16 August 2025
Immediate management of sudden vision loss with suspected retinal detachment in primary care:
- Recognise sudden vision loss as an ophthalmic emergency requiring urgent referral.
- Do not delay referral; arrange an urgent same-day or next-day referral to hospital eye services for specialist assessment and treatment.
- Advise the patient to avoid strenuous activity and to keep the head elevated to reduce further retinal damage while awaiting specialist care.
- Do not attempt treatment in primary care; retinal detachment requires prompt surgical intervention to prevent permanent vision loss.
- Provide clear safety-netting advice, instructing the patient to seek immediate care if symptoms worsen, such as increased floaters, flashes, or further vision loss.
Summary: Sudden vision loss with suspected retinal detachment is a sight-threatening emergency that must be referred urgently to secondary care without delay for specialist diagnosis and treatment to preserve vision.
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