Transient Monocular Vision loss - Differential Diagnosis Ischemia - Large artery disease (atherothrombosis, embolus, dissection). - Small artery occlusive disease (anterior ischemic optic neuropathy, vasculitis) Retinal vein occlusion - Associated with chronic glaucoma, atherosclerotic risk factors (age, DM, HTN), hyperviscosity, coagulopathy Retinal vasospasm / retinal migraine - Poorly understood vasospasm of retinal artery, associated with migraine headaches. Generally reversible Optic neuropathy - Patients with chronic optic neuropathy can have transient episodes of vision loss, usually with hot showers or exercise (inc body temp –Uhthoff’s phenomenon) Papilledema - “whiting” or “graying out” of part or all of the visual field, usually positional. Caused by decreased nerve perfusion associated with increased ICP Optic nerve compression - Provoked by changes in gaze/eye movement, assoc with compressive optic neuropathies from tumor, trauma, Graves. Ocular causes - Increased intraocular pressure (angle closure glaucoma), anterior chamber hemorrhage, vitreous floaters obscuring central vision #Transient #Monocular #VisionLoss #Differential #Diagnosis #Ophthalmology