Vision Loss - History Guide

Author – Dr Emily Liu  Editor -Dr Emily Liu

Last updated 29/07/2025

Table of Contents

Introduction

When taking a history from a patient presenting with ophthalmic symptoms, it is important to ask about any vision loss. 

Vision loss can be either partial or complete. It can be caused by pathologies affecting the transit of light through the eye or the transmission and processing of neuronal signals along the visual pathway. 

This guide provides an approach to vision loss and potential differentials for vision loss that cannot be corrected by refractive tools. 

A good approach to vision loss is categorising it into: (i) transient or intermittent (ii) sudden or gradual (iii) painful or painless.

Presenting complaint: vision loss

A helpful mnemonic for expanding on a presenting complaint is NOTEPAD

 

N – Nature

  • Which eye(s) is affected?
  • Complete vs partial vision loss?
  • Central or peripheral?
  • Any visual field abnormalities? 
DefectDescriptionExample Causes
Monocular vision lossOne eye affectedOptic nerve or eye pathology
ScotomaLocalised blind spot in visual fieldMacular degeneration, optic neuritis, glaucoma, visual aura in migraine (scintillating scotoma), diabetic retinopathy
Altitudinal lossLoss of vision in the upper or lower part of the visual fieldRetinal detachment, pathologies affecting the optic nerve e.g. AION, glaucoma
Bitemporal hemianopiaOuter visual fields/tunnel vision  Optic chiasm compression (e.g. pituitary tumour)
Homonymous hemianopiaSame side of visual field of both eyesLesions of the optic tract, optic radiation, or occipital cortex (macula-sparing)
QuadrantanopiaOne quadrant of visual fieldOptic radiation or occipital cortex lesion

O – Onset

  • When did it occur?
  • Was the vision loss sudden or gradual?
  • Timeframe: seconds, minutes, hours, days, months?
  • Triggering events (trauma, position, activity)?
  • Previous episodes?
 

T – Timing

  • Was the vision loss persistent or intermittent?
  • Did it resolve spontaneously (suggesting TIA/migraine)?
 

E – Exacerbating/Relieving Factors

  • Does anything make vision better or worse?
  • Is vision worse in bright light or in the dark? E.g. acute angle closure glaucoma symptoms may be worse with mydriasis (e.g. in dark). Retinitis pigmentosa can present with nyctalopia (night blindness).

P – Progression

  • Has vision changed over time?
  • Is it stable, improving, or deteriorating?

A – Associated Symptoms

Ophthalmic:

  • Eye pain – was there any pain associated with vision loss? 
  • Flashers and floaters – may precede visual loss in retinal detachment and vitreous detachment 
  • Presence of a dark curtain across their field of vision – suggestive of retinal detachment
  • Halos around lights – associated with acute angle closure glaucoma (acute) and cataract (chronic)
  • Visual distortions (e.g. metamorphopsia – straight lines appearing wavy)
  • Reddening of eye (see “red eye” guide”)
  • Discharge from eye
  • Grittiness/dryness
  • Photophobia
  • Swelling/tenderness of eye
  • Visual hallucinations (Charles-Bonnet syndrome

Systemic:

  • Headache (migraine, GCA)
  • Stroke symptoms: facial droop, limb weakness, dysarthria
  • GCA screen: jaw claudication, scalp tenderness, fatigue

D – Disability

  • Impact on daily activities, mobility, employment, driving

Red Flags

Vision loss itself is a red flag symptom. However, there are serious causes of vision loss that require urgent sight-saving intervention and it is important to demonstrate that you are considering them by asking red flag questions to screen for them. 

Red flags/conditions requiring urgent referral and management (see below for typical presentation and associated features): 

  • Retinal detachment – curtain, floaters, painless

  • Acute angle-closure glaucoma – painful, red eye, nausea, haloes around lights

  • Giant cell arteritis – headache, jaw claudication, age >50, females > males

  • Central retinal artery occlusion – sudden, painless monocular loss

  • Neovascular (wet) AMD – distortion, central vision loss

Background

In any history you will ask about past medical history, medications, allergies, social history, and family history. In a history about vision loss you can show how much you know about the various causes by explicitly asking about relevant risk factors

Past Medical History

  • Ask about other medical conditions the patient may have and what else they see the doctor for.
  • Important conditions for screen for include: 
    • Any ocular conditions
    • Refractive disorders – myopia/hyperopia 
    • Diabetes (diabetic retinopathy, increased risk of VH and retinal detachment)
    • Hypertension (hypertensive retinopathy)
    • Cardiovascular conditions e.g. ischaemic heart disease, atrial fibrillation, carotid artery disease (retinal vascular occlusion)
    • Hypercoagulable state – cancer, thrombophilia e.g. history of DVT, PE (retinal vascular occlusion)
  • It is also important to ask about any previous trauma or surgeries to the eye.
  • Contact lens wear
    • Daily disposables/monthly/extended wear. 
    • Ask about contact lens hygiene and whether the patient sleeps, showers, or swims with lenses on.

Drug History

  • Understand the medications the patient is taking e.g. patients with cardiovascular disease should be on appropriate secondary prevention. 
  • Combined oral contraceptives increase the risk of retinal vessel occlusion.
  • Antiplatelets/anticoagulants – may increase risk of intraocular haemorrhage.
  • Steroids – increased risk of cataract, glaucoma

Social History

  • Living environment and support at home – it is important to understand the support an individual has at home and the kind of environment they live in as these have implications for how well they may cope with any long-lasting disabilities/visual loss. 
  • Employment/livelihood – visual loss may have significant effects on someone’s ability to work
  • Driving – individuals with visual loss will likely have to notify the DVLA and may have to stop driving 
  • Smoking – significant risk factor for cardiovascular disease 
  • Alcohol 
  • Recreational drugs

Family History

  • Ask about any family history of eye conditions (e.g. glaucoma, retinal detachment) and loss of vision. Inherited retinal disorders are an important cause of visual loss in the younger working population. 
  • Ask about family history of cardiovascular disease and thrombophilic conditions (risk factor for retinal vascular occlusion)

Differential diagnoses

Vision loss can be categorised into sudden or gradual loss. Acute vision loss can be categorised into painful versus painless. There are a number of differentials to consider for each category. 

Differentials for sudden loss of vision

Sudden painless loss of vision  

Differential 

Classic presentation 

Risk factors in the history

Retinal detachment 

Sudden onset, painless and progressive visual loss described as a curtain/shadow progressing to the centre of the visual field from the periphery. New flashers +/- floaters may precede visual loss. 

Diabetes

Myopia 

Increasing age

Previous ophthalmic surgery e.g. cataract surgery

Eye trauma

Retinal artery occlusion 

 

(Ocular stroke)

Central retinal artery occlusion presents as sudden monocular painless loss of vision. 

 

Transient visual loss (amaurosis fugax) caused by ischaemia is considered a form of TIA. 

 

Branch retinal artery occlusion presents as a sudden painless visual field defect. 

Increasing age

Hypertension

Diabetes

Smoking

Hyperlipidaemia

Atrial fibrillation

Carotid artery disease

Thrombophilia 

Retinal vein occlusion 

Sudden monocular painless visual loss or visual field loss. 

Increasing age

Hypertension

Diabetes

Smoking

Hyperlipidaemia 

Thrombophilia 

Glaucoma and ocular hypertension

Oral contraceptive pill

Neovascular (wet) age-related macular degeneration 

Subacute painless loss of central vision, usually over the course of hours. 

 

Patients may present with visual distortions (metamorphopsia). 

Advancing age

Smoking 

Family history 

Cardiovascular disease

Hypertension 

Hyperlipidaemia

Diabetes

Northern European ancestry 

Vitreous haemorrhage 

Small bleeds cause floaters and possibly a red hue in vision. 

 

Moderate bleeds cause numerous dark spots, red hue in vision. 

 

Large bleeds can cause sudden painless visual loss. 

Diabetes

Ocular trauma 

Coagulation disorders 

Stroke 

Vision loss in stroke can present as homonymous hemianopia or quadrantanopia. Patients may present with other neurological symptoms e.g. facial, arm and/or leg weakness, speech disturbances, sensory changes. 

Increasing age

Hypertension

Diabetes

Smoking

Hyperlipidaemia

Atrial fibrillation

Carotid artery disease

Thrombophilia 

 

Sudden painful loss of vision 

Differential 

Presentation  

Risk factors in the history 

Acute angle-closure glaucoma 

Sudden unilateral painful loss of vision, red eye +/- photophobia, +/- haloes/rainbows around lights +/- nausea/vomiting.

 

Symptoms may be worse with mydriasis e.g. watching TV in a dark room

Advancing age

Asian ethnicity 

Hypermetropia

Pupillary dilatation 

Giant cell arteritis (arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy)

Sudden unilateral loss of vision, acute headache localised around the temporal region +/- jaw claudication +/- scalp tenderness.

 

Systemic features: fatigue, weight loss, anorexia 

Age: > 50

Female sex

Past medical history of polymyalgia rheumatica

Family history 

Optic neuritis  

Usually transient acute/subacute unilateral vision loss over hours or days. Vision loss varies from blur to no light perception. Typically worsens over days and resolves within 2 weeks. 

 

Eye pain worse on eye movement

 

Impaired colour vision (poor discrimination of red-green). 

 

Optic neuritis is closely linked to multiple sclerosis so patients may present with other signs/symptoms e.g. visual, sensory, motor changes. 

 

Uhthoff’s phenomenon (associated with MS) – worsening of vision following rise in body temperature 

Middle-aged female 

Caucasian population 

Family history 

Endophthalmitis 

Blurred vision, vision loss, red eye, eye pain. 

Recent ocular surgery – postoperative endophthalmitis is the most common form. 

Migraine with aura 

Migraine with aura can cause transient vision loss, typically presenting as evolving positive visual changes e.g. scintillating/flickering shapes.

 

Usually resolves within 60 minutes and affects both eyes, but one hemifield. 

 

Usually accompanied or followed by headache (severe, unilateral, throbbing). 

Female sex 

Family history 

 

Common triggers include: fatigue, stress, alcohol, combined oral contraceptive pill, hunger/dehydration, menstruation, bright lights, certain foods (e.g. cheese, chocolate, red wine). 

Note: vision loss can be a complication of uveitis and keratitis, but red eye and irritation are more prominent features so they are covered in the “red eye” guide. 

 

Differentials for gradual loss of vision 

Differential 

Presentation  

Risk factors in the history 

Cataract 

Painless and gradual loss of vision, blurred vision.

 

+/- glare, halos around lights, difficulty with night vision. 

Advancing age (main risk factor)

Ocular trauma 

Ocular surgery 

High myopia

Medications: steroids  

Age-related macular degeneration 

Painless and subacute (wet AMD) or gradual (dry AMD) onset of vision loss, reduced visual acuity, reduced night vision

 

+/- metamorphopsia, visual hallucinations (Charles-Bonnet syndrome)  

Advancing age 

Smoking 

Family history 

Hypertension 

Hyperlipidaemia

Diabetes

Open angle glaucoma 

Progressive peripheral vision loss, reduced visual acuity. 

Asymptomatic until advanced, central vision is often preserved until late-stage disease. 

Advancing age

Afro-caribbean ethnicity

Hypertension 

Smoking 

Diabetes 

Myopia 

Steroids 

Family history 

Diabetic retinopathy 

Often asymptomatic and picked up with diabetic screening. 

Patients may present with gradual painless vision loss (due to diabetic retinopathy or maculopathy) or symptoms of vitreous haemorrhage/retinal detachment (complications of proliferative diabetic retinopathy). 

(Poorly controlled, long-term) diabetes 

Hypertensive retinopathy 

Often asymptomatic until advanced disease. 

Patients may present with gradual painless vision loss and other signs of end-organ damage 

(Poorly controlled, long-term) hypertension 

Retinitis pigmentosa 

Younger patient presenting with nyctalopia (night blindness), progressive peripheral vision loss (tunnel vision). 

Family history 

MLA Tip 💡

Always screen for red flag signs and symptoms that may require urgent referral and management. 

1. Bowling B. Kanski’s Clinical Ophthalmology: A Systematic Approach. 9th ed. London: Elsevier; 2019

2. Denniston A, Murray P, editors. Oxford Handbook of Ophthalmology. 4th ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2018.

3. American Academy of Ophthalmology. Basic Ophthalmology: Essentials for Medical Students. 11th ed. San Francisco: American Academy of Ophthalmology; 2016.

4. Shah P, Shah S. The Duke-Elder Exam of Ophthalmology: A Comprehensive Guide. 2nd ed. Boca Raton: CRC Press; 2021.

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