- Help patients keep their eyes on the ball—and safe from injury
- How to avert an eye care crisis
- Case study: Avoid blurring line between clinical practice and research in optometry
- As technology turns, sports vision optometrist pivots
- Vision-friendly holiday gifts for children
- What you say versus what they hear: Talking contact lenses
- Identify signs of abuse
- excercise may prevent eye diseases
- Tips for an eye-healthy Thanksgiving feast
- protecting patients eye summer
- Lutein zeaxanthin reaffirmed over beta-carotene in AREDS2
- Diabetes Alert Day
- Day of unplugging
- 2021 Telehealth Summit
- Performance evaluation
- wearing contacts safely during COVID-19
- Recharging the retina
- Vitamin A good for the eyes
- Children device use and Myopia
- Physical distancing masks and eye protection
- COVID-19 infection control refresher
- doctor google online symptom checkers
- COVID-19 digital eyestrain
- The many benefits of the Mediterranean Diet
- Spring Break Healthy Contact Lens Hygiene
- CPR Certification Heart Month
- healthy makeup habits
- checking blood pressure
- healthy eyes recipe-eye-friendly nutrients
- best holiday gifts for childrens vision development
- winter weather tips
- Great American Smokeout
- 5 things to ask your older patients about driving
- eating for your eyes
- Vision therapy reading scores
- secondhand smoke could harm childrens eyes
- AOA resources can help patients see with less daylight
- dark chocolate does not improve eyesight
- Pumpkin nutrition benefits
- Teenager loses vision after a steady diet of French fries
- Systolic versus diastolic readings blood pressure
- Increase fitting success with better communication
- Contact Lens Health Week
- Mixing systemic and ocular pediatric medications
- The wonderful healing properties of amniotic membranes
- Optometry and social work
- Smoking and Eye Health
- Novel contact lens design tracks IOP for continuous 24-hour period
- Blue-light hype or much ado about nothing
- Help Patients summer swimming
- Toys and games nice and naughty for vision development
- 21st-century optometric care
- Flu views Should you get a flu shot
- Vision is key to aging gracefully new study says
- How optometry can prevent serious harm from falls
- Help patients see the light when driving at night
- Nascent AI technology mixed results
- Helping aging Americans see the future
- Hand Eye Coordination and Batting
- Some ophthalmic drugs inadvisable for breastfeeding patients
- clinician-patient relationship affects outcomes
- Does better coordination equal better performance
- Soccer team rescued from Thailand cave could face temporary vision struggles
- Mediterranean diet
- Summer Camp
- Pool of knowledge Educate public on swimming and eye safety
- Gene-editing technology worth keeping an eye on
- When cancer Rxs affect ocular Dxs
- The Pharmacology of Allergies
- Ocular Inserts
- Exercise good judgment regarding glaucoma
- Google Drops
- Reading Proficiency and Eye Exams
- AOA survey Vision a winner for Olympians top skill
- Video-game vision therapy
- Olympics pique interest in winter eye care for athletes
- prevent eye-related injuries from sports and recreation
- Interventions in adulthood can improve binocular disorders
- Amber-tinted lenses & Blue Light
- All eyes on dry eye
- Potential new antimicrobial ingredient for multipurpose disinfectant solutions
- AOA releases new evidence based guideline for pediatric eye care
- help stub out smoking
- Spring has sprung Help patients manage allergies
- Contact considerations choosing the right lens
- Kids prolonged smartphone use could trigger dry eye
- Doctors of optometry dedicate decades to lowvision care and research
- New study provides insight into paths of child vision development
- Super QB sees vision training perks
- New research designed to open eyes on space travel
- Vision training could mitigate soccer related concussions
- Doctors of optometry should play role in clearing children
- Need gift ideas for the kids
- PPOD program a success story for optometry
- Baby its cold and contagious outside
- Help patients adjust to dwindling sunlight
- No playing around iPads over patching
- As temperatures rise so does awareness of Zika virus
- Doctors of optometry can help patients stop smoking
- Study helps lay foundation
- Nutritional balancing act
- Genetic testing and nutritional supplements
- Corneal crosslinking offers adolescents options
- Night lights illuminating roadways and sidewalks
- Swindles cons and scams
- Pigment on the surface of lenses poses risks
- Researchers take a fresh look at eye drops
- 4 tips to help patients eat for healthy vision
- Uncorrected vision problems childhood literacy deficits linked
- 6 nutrition questions you should be asking patients
- 5 tips for multifocal contact lens success
- Head games Football TBI and AOAs brain injury manual
- Head down yoga poses increase eye pressure in glaucoma patients
- Battling blue light
- New research addresses sports related concussions in kids
- With climate change prevention matters more than ever
- How to educate patients about UV protection this winter
- Study shows risk of falling remains after cataract surgery
- Help prevent the spreading of infectious diseases
- When spectacles pose a risk of injury
- Talk to patients about smoking habits
- Emphasize handwashing and other healthy habits for contact lens wearers
- Use AOAs new evidence based guideline to improve exams every day
- Smart contacts green lighted for human tests
- AOA brain injury manual addendum now available
- 4 ways to help patients manage allergies
- How to recommend the right supplements to patients
- How to discuss nutrition with patients
- Sweet treatment honey a possible dry eye therapy
- Industry announcement moves smart lenses closer to reality
- Spotlight returns on football concussions
- The benefits of blinking
- Could your morning coffee be good for your eyes
- Exercise Link to Retinal Disease
- What does a measles outbreak mean for optometrists
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- Counsel patients about cosmetic products and procedures
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- First skin to eye stem cell transplant shows promise researchers say
- Novel high powered prisms to expand vision fields of patients with hemianopia
- No symptoms no need for regular eye exam Think again
- Treating the zebra patient
- Look for signs of depression anxiety in patients with diabetes and diabetes related eye disease
- Broccoli can deliver therapeutic benefits, study says
- FDA approves intraocular lens
- Patients share their perspectives understanding doctor of optometry talks
- Doctors of optometry carry the torch for athletes
- depression anxiety in patients with declining visual outcomes
- Doctors of optometry help Olympic shooters hit the target
- Hygiene key to warding off painful contact lens mishaps
- Parents can prevent ocular injuries from household chemicals to young children
- Low vision study quality of life
- Blink and youll miss it
- Occupational therapy eases depression in patients with age related macular degeneration
- Diets and eye health
- Blue light nemesis Green veggies carotenoids
- Children and Contact Lenses
- kids vision
- autismeyes
- mucin balls more of a menace than thought
- Study underscores optometrys role in improving aging patients quality of life
- Wildfires and Ocular Health
- When driving becomes dangerous
- Blinded by video games
- Blue Light and Kids Sleep
- Kids and Devices
- Diabetes patients perspective
- Vapor Study
- Tea Study
- National Sunglasses Day
- How to examine patients with special needs
How to best treat pregnant and breastfeeding patients
June 7, 2016
Know your options for treating ocular disease during pregnancy.
Excerpted from the May edition of AOA Focus, page 46.
It's the responsibility of the doctor of optometry to warn pregnant and breastfeeding patients about the risks of using any ocular medications, including dilation drops. Even though the patient may choose to forego dilation or treatment, sometimes not using a drop or medication can put the patient at risk for ocular problems.
Jill Autry, O.D., is helping to put an end to the confusion by sharing her knowledge about safe treatments for pregnant and breastfeeding patients. Dr. Autry, who also has a pharmacy degree, often lectures on which topical and oral treatments are safe for this patient subgroup.
"Obstetricians have patients who need all types of pharmaceutical care during pregnancy," she says. "They have seen it all. So when we call them and ask about putting a drop in the eye one time to dilate a six-months-pregnant patient, they're looking at us like, 'What?' They are going to get more exposure to toxins when they eat something at a restaurant that's been prepackaged than they are ever going to get in that drop in the eye."
FDA changes
Recently the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) changed its coding system for medicines to be used during pregnancy and breastfeeding, which, until last year, was set up in a category system of A, B, C, D and X. Now the FDA provides three detailed subsections that describe the risks of treating pregnant and breastfeeding women.
"It puts more onus on the physician to weed through the information and see what they think based on the information given," Dr. Autry says. "I think there's good and bad in that."
Doctors of optometry are wise to understand what drugs MDs commonly prescribe for their pregnant patients, which likely means they are safe for optometric use as well. For example, "There aren't a lot of glaucoma drugs labeled category B," Dr. Autry says. "The most common one is brimonidine and once you've used that one, what are you going to use for your second choice? Although beta blockers are historically category C, I know MDs use beta blockers all the time when women have trouble keeping their blood pressure down. To me, that would be my next logical choice."
Different options
Dr. Autry notes that some drugs aren't used in pregnancy out of a potentially overabundance of caution. For instance, because prostaglandins are used on the cervix to initiate labor, U.S. doctors of optometry don't use them to treat glaucoma in pregnant patients, though doctors in other countries do.
However, use of brimonidine around delivery and in newborns has been shown to cause apnea, says Dr. Autry. "I would remove brimonidine at month 8 or 9 and wouldn't use it in breastfeeding patients. At that point, I would use a prostaglandin or nothing until after the baby is born and then start the prostaglandin."
In a course at the 2016 Optometry's Meeting®, Dr. Autry will run through ocular issues—such as viral conjunctivitis, corneal abrasions, preseptal cellulitis, iritis, herpes virus in the eye, glaucoma and bacterial keratitis—and discuss how to treat them in pregnant and breastfeeding patients.
"My goal is to educate other optometrists, give them some options, make them feel more comfortable, and, therefore, make patients feel more comfortable with options for treating ocular disease during their pregnancy," Dr. Autry says.