Glaucoma
Glaucoma isn’t one disease. Instead, it’s a group of diseases that cause damage to the optic nerve. In most cases, this damage is the result of increased pressure within your eye. As the optic nerve deteriorates, the patient gradually loses the ability to see to the side (peripheral vision). With time your central vision may begin to decrease as well. If Glaucoma isn’t treated, it eventually may lead to total blindness.
In fact, Glaucoma is the second most common cause of blindness. That’s because Glaucoma often gives no warning sign until permanent damage has already occurred. In most cases the onset is so gradual you’re not aware you’ve lost some of your peripheral vision. There are several types of Glaucoma, including primary open-angle glaucoma, angle-closure glaucoma, congenital glaucoma and secondary glaucoma. Primary open-angle glaucoma develops slowly and painlessly when normal eye fluid known as aqueous humor doesn’t drain properly, causing pressure to build up within your eye. It accounts for 60 percent to 70 percent of all Glaucoma cases.
About 10 percent of people with Glaucoma have angle-closure glaucoma, which occurs suddenly and often causes dramatic symptoms. This type of Glaucoma is a medical emergency and requires immediate treatment. A much smaller number of people have congenital glaucoma, which is present at birth, or secondary glaucoma, which results from trauma, chronic steroid use or disease.
Still, the news about Glaucoma is encouraging. When it’s detected and treated early, Glaucoma need not cause blindness or even severe vision loss for most people.
Signs and Symptoms
The signs and symptoms of Glaucoma vary, depending on the type of Glaucoma.
Primary open-angle glaucoma
Primary open-angle glaucoma often goes undetected for years. The pressure within the eye increases gradually, with no early warning signs. But eventually, you lose more and more of your side vision until only a narrow section of your visual field remains clear. This type of Glaucoma tends to affect both eyes, although you may have symptoms in just one eye first. In addition to reduced peripheral vision, the signs and symptoms of primary open-angle glaucoma may include:
- Sensitivity to glare.
- Trouble differentiating between varying shades of light and dark.
Angle-closure glaucoma
Attacks of angle-closure glaucoma often develop suddenly, but you also may have preliminary warnings weeks or even months ahead of a severe attack. Glaucoma attacks usually occur in the evening when the light is dim and your pupils are dilated. The pain may be very severe and cause vomiting. Other signs and symptoms of acute glaucoma may include:
- Blurred vision, usually in just the eye involved.
- Halos appearing around lights.
- Reddening of your affected eye.
Congenital glaucoma
This type of Glaucoma is usually present at birth, but signs and symptoms — such as eyes that seem cloudy, are often watery or teary or are sensitive to light — may not appear until an infant is a few months old.
Secondary glaucoma
The symptoms of secondary glaucoma will vary, depending on the cause.
Causes
Your eyes are part of an elegant and complex process that transforms waves of light into images you see. The process begins when light enters your eyes through a clear tissue known as the cornea. Behind the cornea, the colored portion of your eye — the iris — regulates the amount of light that passes through to the lens.
The lens then focuses this light onto the retina, a thin, transparent membrane in the back portion of your eye. The retina translates light into signals that are sent to your optic nerve, and the optic nerve sends these signals to your brain, where they’re interpreted as images. This is what allows you to see.
The internal structures of your eye are nourished by a clear fluid called the aqueous humor.
This fluid circulates from behind your iris through the dark opening in the centre of your eye (pupil) and into the space between your iris and your cornea. The aqueous humor not only nourishes your eyes but also exerts a constant pressure (intraocular pressure, or IOP) that helps maintain your eyes’ shape.
Healthy eyes constantly produce aqueous humor. To keep from building up in the eye, the fluid drains primarily through what is called the trabecular meshwork. This drainage occurs in a “drainage angle” located at the point where your iris and cornea meet. From here, the excess fluid flows into a channel (Schlemm’s canal), and then into a system of small veins on the outside of your eye.
Sometimes, though, the drainage angle doesn’t function properly. This causes the aqueous humor to back up and put pressure on another fluid, the vitreous humor, which is located behind the lens. The increased pressure within the vitreous humor presses on the fibres of the optic nerve, slowly damaging them. The result is a gradual loss of vision.
Primary open-angle glaucoma
In this type of Glaucoma, the drainage angle in your eye remains open, yet the aqueous fluid doesn’t drain properly. It’s not entirely clear why this happens, but you’re much more likely to develop primary open-angle glaucoma as you get older. It may be that your cells don’t drain aqueous humor as efficiently later in life.
Angle-closure glaucoma
Unlike primary open-angle glaucoma, which damages your vision over a period of months or years, acute angle-closure Glaucoma develops suddenly. In most cases, people with this type of glaucoma have a very narrow-angle where the aqueous fluid drains between the iris and cornea. When their pupils become unusually dilated, the angle may close completely, causing a sudden increase in pressure and triggering an acute attack.
In some people, the narrow drainage angle may simply be a structural problem. In others, it may be the result of ageing.
Generally, as you age the lens in each eye gradually becomes larger, pushing your iris forward and narrowing the angle between your iris and cornea. In both cases, factors that cause your pupils to dilate may close the angle completely. These include:
- Medications. Certain drugs, such as antihistamines and tricyclic antidepressants, dilate your pupils. Also, do some drops your ophthalmologist may use to dilate your eyes during an eye exam.
- Darkness or dim light.
- Emotional stress.
Risk Factors
The majority of people with slightly increased intraocular pressure don’t develop Glaucoma. This can make it difficult to predict just who will develop the disease. But certain factors may increase your risk. They include:
- Age. Your chance of developing Glaucoma begins to increase after age 40. In fact, primary open-angle glaucoma is most common in older adult women. But although the incidence of Glaucoma increases as you grow older, the disease is not considered a normal part of ageing.
- Race. Black Americans are three to four times more likely than white Americans to get Glaucoma and six times more likely to suffer permanent blindness as a result of the disease.The exact reasons for this aren’t known, although black Americans may be more susceptible to a damage of the optic nerve and may respond less well to current therapies than white Americans. Asians, particularly those of Vietnamese descent, are also more susceptible to glaucoma than whites. And people of Japanese ancestry are more prone to develop a type of Glaucoma in which intraocular pressure is normal (low-pressure glaucoma).
- Family history. If you have an immediate relative — such as a parent or sibling, with Glaucoma, you have a 20 percent chance of also developing the disease.
- Diabetes and other medical conditions. If you have diabetes, your risk of developing Glaucoma is three times greater than that for people who don’t have diabetes. It’s possible that having extreme Myopia (nearsightedness) or a history of high blood pressure (hypertension) or heart disease may also increase your risk.
- Injuries. Past injuries to your eyes or eye surgery may trigger secondary glaucoma, so may any type of inflammation, especially uveitis, an inflammation of the eye that is sometimes associated with inflammatory bowel disease and juvenile rheumatoid arthritis.
- Corticosteroid use. Your risk of developing secondary glaucoma increases if you take oral corticosteroids for prolonged periods of time, if you use inhaled steroids for asthma or you apply a steroid cream or ointment to your eyes.
When To Seek Medical Advice
Primary open-angle glaucoma gives few warning signs until permanent damage has already occurred. That’s why regular eye exams are the key to detecting glaucoma early enough for successful treatment. It’s best to have routine eye checkups every 2 to 4 years after age 40 and every 1 to 2 years after age 65.
Don’t wait for symptoms of any kind to occur. If you have one or more risk factors of glaucoma, talk to your doctor about scheduling regular eye exams. Your doctor can perform some tests, but others need to be done by an eye care specialist.
In addition, be alert for signs of an acute angle-closure glaucoma attack, such as a severe headache or pain in your eye or eyebrow, nausea, blurred vision or rainbow halos around lights. If you experience any of these symptoms, seek immediate care at your local hospital emergency room.
If you’ve been diagnosed with Glaucoma, establish a regular schedule of examinations with your doctor to be sure your treatment is helping maintain a safe pressure of the fluid in your eyes.
Screening And Diagnosis
A simple, painless testing procedure known as tonometry can alert you and your physician to the possibility you may have Glaucoma. Tonometry measures the pressure within your eyeball. Normal intraocular pressure ranges from 10 to 21 millimetres of mercury. If your pressure is higher, your ophthalmologist can perform further tests to help determine whether you have Glaucoma.
Air-puff tonometry
Air-puff tonometry uses air to measure eye pressure. It does this by measuring the amount of force needed to indent your eye. This test is useful for preliminary Glaucoma screenings.
Applanation tonometry
An applanation tonometer is a sophisticated device that’s usually fitted to a slit lamp, a common instrument for the eye examination. For this test, your eyes will be anesthetized with drops and the tonometer placed directly on your eye. The pressure readings from this test are extremely accurate.
Keep in mind that a high-pressure reading doesn’t necessarily mean you have Glaucoma. At the same time, it’s possible to have damage to your optic nerve and still have normal intraocular pressure. For these reasons, your ophthalmologist may choose to perform tests to check your optic nerve or your peripheral vision.
Tests for optic nerve damage
Your ophthalmologist may use an instrument called an ophthalmoscope to examine the back of your eye (fundus) and check the health of the fibres in your optic nerve. Damaged fibres may be asymmetrical or pale in color. Your doctor may also use a combination of laser light and computers to create a three-dimensional image of your optic nerve. This can reveal very slight changes that may indicate the beginnings of Glaucoma.
Visual field tests
Glaucoma gradually diminishes your ability to see to the side. That’s why your ophthalmologist may recommend perimetry tests to check your peripheral vision. Some of these tests, which involve watching a monitor with hundreds of flickering lights, can be quite complex. Yet perimetry tests are still the best method for measuring peripheral vision. If you have optic nerve damage, you may need visual field testing as often as every 1 to 4 months for a time.
Other tests
To distinguish between primary open-angle and angle-closure glaucoma, your ophthalmologist may use an instrument known as a gonioscope to inspect the drainage angle between your cornea and iris.
Treatment
You may not need any treatment if your eye pressure is only slightly elevated and there’s no damage to your optic nerve. Instead, your doctor may choose to monitor your condition with regular eye exams. But if you have signs of optic nerve damage, treatment can help slow its progression. Unfortunately, it’s not currently possible to reverse the damage that has already occurred. Most people have good results with Glaucoma medication, but some may need surgery instead.
Medications for Glaucoma
Most Glaucoma medications are applied directly to your eyes in the form of drops, although a few may be taken orally. Because a portion of the drops may be absorbed into your bloodstream, you sometimes may have side effects unrelated to your eyes. In addition, some medications may lose their effectiveness over time. In that case, you may need to change or add medications or have surgery to control your Glaucoma.
It’s not always easy to use Glaucoma medication as directed. Drops usually need to be applied several times each day, and if you’re using more than one medication, you need to wait at least 5 to 10 minutes between applications. This rigorous schedule can sometimes seem time-consuming and confusing.
Furthermore, because Glaucoma rarely causes symptoms in its early stages, you may not notice any change in your vision when you start using medication. Still, it’s extremely important to follow your treatment plan exactly as your doctor prescribes. Skipping even a few doses of medication can cause your Glaucoma to become worse. If you have trouble with your treatment plan, tell your doctor.
Surgery for Glaucoma
When medications aren’t effective or well tolerated, surgery may be an option. Keep in mind that surgery doesn’t cure Glaucoma. As a result, you may need to keep using antiglaucoma medications even after surgery. In some cases, you may need a second operation.
Laser surgery (trabeculoplasty). In this procedure, your doctor uses a beam of high energy light to shrink part of the meshwork of your eye’s drainage angle. This causes other areas of the meshwork to stretch, which helps aqueous fluid drain more easily.
Laser surgery, which usually takes between 10 and 20 minutes, will likely be performed in your doctor’s office under local anesthesia. Following surgery, you should have almost no discomfort, but you’ll need to continue taking eye drops, at least for a time, and you may need more surgery within 5 years. In some cases, intraocular pressure actually may increase following laser surgery. In most cases this is temporary, but sometimes the rise in pressure may be permanent, leading to further vision loss.
Trabeculectomy. In this procedure, a surgeon creates a new drainage pathway for fluid in the white part of your eye (sclera) using traditional surgical techniques. Many people who have had this type of surgery no longer need eye drops. But there are also risks. In some cases, scars may form that close the drainage channels. This is a particular problem in young people, blacks and people who have had cataract surgery.
Drainage implants. This may be an option for adults when other treatments have failed as well as for infants and children. In this procedure a small silicon tube is inserted in your eye to help drain aqueous fluid. Possible complications include the clouding of the lens of your eye (cataracts) and implant failure.
Medications and surgery for acute glaucoma
Doctors may administer several different medications during an attack of acute glaucoma in an effort to reduce eye pressure as quickly as possible. Once your eye pressure is brought under control, you may have an emergency operation known as an iridotomy to create a drainage hole in your iris. This surgery is now almost exclusively performed with lasers, which allow specialists to form an opening without making an incision in your eye. Laser iridotomy is an outpatient procedure that avoids many of the risks of traditional surgery. After treatment, you can usually resume your normal activities right away.
Treatment for low-tension glaucoma
Although eye pressure in this type of Glaucoma is normal, treatment with standard antiglaucoma medications seems to slow the progress of the disease.
Prevention
There is no known way to prevent Glaucoma, but regular checkups can help detect the disease in its early stages before irreversible damage has occurred. As a general rule, have eye exams every 2 to 4 years if you’re between the ages of 40 and 65. It’s best to have your eyes examined every 1 to 2 years if:
- You’re 65 years or older.
- You have a family history of eye disease.
- You’re of African or Asian ancestry.
- You have diabetes or a chronic inflammatory disease, such as rheumatoid arthritis.
- You’re taking corticosteroids.
- You may need even more frequent check-ups if you’ve been diagnosed with abnormally high intraocular pressure or have a history of serious eye injury.