Glaucoma
Glaucoma is a group of eye conditions that can damage the optic nerve. This nerve sends the images you see to your brain.
Most often, optic nerve damage is caused by increased pressure in the eye. This is called intraocular pressure.
Glaucoma - Animation
Too much pressure is almost never a good thing. When it's bearing down on you from work or family responsibilities, pressure can stress you out. But when pressure is building in your eye from a disease called glaucoma, it can cause permanent blindness if it's not treated. Glaucoma involves the clear fluid in the front part of your eye, which is called the aqueous humor. Your eye constantly makes this fluid, which then drains out through a chamber in the front of the eye. When you have glaucoma, the fluid becomes blocked so it can't drain out of your eye. As the fluid builds up, it causes the pressure to rise. That pressure eventually damages the optic nerve, the important nerve which sends images to your brain and allows you to see. There are four different types of glaucoma. The most common type is called open-angle glaucoma. Although no one knows for sure what causes it, open-angle glaucoma tends to run in families. In people with this form, the pressure rises slowly over time. Another type of glaucoma appears in babies at birth, it's called congenital glaucoma. Certain drugs and eye diseases can cause yet another form of the disease, called secondary glaucoma. But probably the most serious form of the disease is closed-angle glaucoma. It occurs when the angle becomes suddenly blocked, causing pressure in the eye to rise sharply. This is an emergency situation. Without treatment, you can lose sight very quickly. Because most people don't have any symptoms of glaucoma until they've already lost sight, the best way to diagnose it is by having regular eye exams. The eye doctor will dilate, or widen your pupil to get a better view of your eye. Your doctor may also do a test called tonometry to check your eye pressure, and take a photo or laser image of your optic nerve to make sure it's healthy. The main treatment for glaucoma is eye drops to reduce the pressure inside your eyes. If drops can't control your pressure, or you have closed-angle glaucoma and your pressure rises very quickly, you'll probably need surgery, or laser therapy to open up a new drainage channel in your eye. Your best defense against glaucoma is a good offense. See your eye doctor for a complete eye exam before you turn 40, or even sooner if you have a family history of glaucoma. That way, your doctor can spot the disease before it can steal your sight.
Causes
Glaucoma is one of the most common causes of blindness in the United States. There are four major types of glaucoma:
- Open-angle glaucoma
- Angle-closure glaucoma, also called closed-angle glaucoma
- Congenital glaucoma
- Secondary glaucoma
The front part of the eye is filled with a clear fluid called aqueous humor. This fluid is made in an area behind the colored part of the eye (iris). It leaves the eye through channels where the iris and cornea meet. This area is called the anterior chamber angle, or the angle. The cornea is the clear covering on the front of the eye that is in front of the iris, pupil, and angle.
Glaucoma
Glaucoma is a condition of increased fluid pressure inside the eye. The increased pressure causes compression of the retina and the optic nerve which can eventually lead to nerve damage. Glaucoma can cause partial vision loss, with blindness as a possible eventual outcome.
Anything that slows or blocks the flow of this fluid will cause pressure to build up in the eye.
- In open-angle glaucoma, the increase in pressure is often small and slow.
- In closed-angle glaucoma, the increase is often high and sudden.
- Either type can damage the optic nerve.
Open-angle glaucoma is the most common type of glaucoma.
- The cause is unknown. The increase in eye pressure happens slowly over time. You cannot feel it.
- The increased pressure pushes on the optic nerve. Damage to the optic nerve causes blind spots in your vision.
- Open-angle glaucoma tends to run in families. Your risk is higher if you have a parent or grandparent with open-angle glaucoma. People of African descent are also at higher risk for this disease.
Closed-angle glaucoma occurs when the fluid is suddenly blocked and cannot flow out of the eye. This causes a quick, severe rise in eye pressure.
- Dilating eye drops and certain medicines may trigger an acute glaucoma attack.
- Acute closed-angle glaucoma is an emergency.
- If you have had acute glaucoma in one eye, you are at risk for it in the second eye. Your eye doctor is likely to treat your second eye to prevent a first attack in that eye.
Secondary glaucoma occurs due to a known cause. Both open- and closed-angle glaucoma can be secondary when caused by something known. Causes include:
- Medicines such as corticosteroids
- Eye diseases, such as uveitis (an inflammation of the middle layer of the eye)
Uveitis
Uveitis is swelling and inflammation of the uvea. The uvea is the middle layer of the wall of the eye. The uvea supplies blood for the iris at the ...
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- Eye injury
Congenital glaucoma occurs in babies.
- It often runs in families.
- It is present at birth.
- It is caused when the eye does not develop normally.
Symptoms
OPEN-ANGLE GLAUCOMA
- Most people have no symptoms.
- Once you are aware of vision loss, the damage is already severe.
- Slow loss of side (peripheral) vision (also called tunnel vision) is the main type of vision loss.
- Advanced glaucoma can lead to blindness.
ANGLE-CLOSURE GLAUCOMA
Symptoms may come and go at first, or steadily become worse. You may notice:
- Sudden, severe pain in one eye
- Decreased or cloudy vision, often called "steamy" vision
- Nausea and vomiting
- Rainbow-like halos around lights
- Red eye
- Eye feels swollen
CONGENITAL GLAUCOMA
Symptoms are most often noticed when the child is a few months old.
- Cloudiness of the front of the eye
- Enlargement of one eye or both eyes
- Red eye
- Sensitivity to light
Sensitivity to light
Photophobia is eye discomfort in bright light.
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SECONDARY GLAUCOMA
- Symptoms are most often related to the underlying problem causing the glaucoma.
- Depending on the cause, symptoms may either be like open-angle glaucoma or angle-closure glaucoma.
Exams and Tests
The only way to diagnose glaucoma is by having a complete eye exam.
- You will be given a test to check your eye pressure. This is called tonometry.
Tonometry
Tonometry is a test to measure the pressure inside your eyes. The test is used to screen for glaucoma. It is also used to measure how well glaucoma...
Read Article Now Book Mark Article - In most cases, you will be given eye drops to widen (dilate) your pupil.
- When your pupil is dilated, your eye doctor will look at the inside of your eye and the optic nerve.
Slit-lamp exam
A slit-lamp, which is a specialized magnifying microscope, is used to examine the structures of the eye (including the cornea, iris, vitreous, and retina). The slit-lamp is used to examine, treat (with a laser), and photograph (with a camera) the eye.
Eye pressure is different at different times of the day. Eye pressure can even be normal in some people with glaucoma. So you may need other tests to confirm glaucoma. They may include:
- Using a special lens to look at the angle of the eye (gonioscopy).
- Photographs or laser scanning images of the inside of your eye (optic nerve imaging).
- Laser scanning images of the angle of the eye.
- Checking your retina -- The retina is the light-sensitive tissue at the back of your eye.
- Checking how your pupil responds to light (pupillary reflex response).
- 3-D view of your eye (slit lamp examination).
Slit lamp examination
The slit-lamp examination looks at structures that are at the front of the eye.
Read Article Now Book Mark Article - Testing the clearness of your vision (visual acuity).
Visual acuity
The visual acuity test is used to determine the smallest letters you can read on a standardized chart (Snellen chart) or a card held 20 feet (6 meter...
Read Article Now Book Mark Article - Testing your field of vision (visual field measurement).
Visual field measurement
The visual field refers to the total area in which objects can be seen in the side (peripheral) vision as you focus your eyes on a central point. Thi...
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Visual field test
Central and peripheral vision is tested by using visual field tests. Changes may indicate eye diseases, such as glaucoma or retinitis.
Treatment
The goal of treatment is to reduce your eye pressure. Treatment depends on the type of glaucoma that you have.
OPEN-ANGLE GLAUCOMA
- If you have open-angle glaucoma, you will probably be given eye drops or receive laser glaucoma treatment.
- You may need more than one type of eye drops. Most people can be treated with eye drops.
- Most of the eye drops used today have fewer side effects than those used in the past.
- Laser treatment uses a painless laser to open the channels where fluid flows out.
- You also may be given pills to lower pressure in the eye.
If drops alone or laser treatment do not work, you may need other treatment:
- If drops and laser treatment do not work, you may need surgery. Your eye doctor will open a new channel so fluid can escape. This will help lower your eye pressure.
- Recently, new implants have been developed that can help treat glaucoma in people having cataract surgery.
ACUTE ANGLE GLAUCOMA
An acute angle-closure attack is a medical emergency. You can become blind in a few days if you are not treated.
- You may be given eye drops, pills, and medicine given through a vein (by IV) to lower your eye pressure.
- Some people also need an emergency operation, called an iridotomy. The eye doctor uses a laser to open a new channel in the iris. Sometimes this is done with surgery. The new channel relieves the attack and will prevent another attack.
- To help prevent an attack in the other eye, the same procedure will often be performed on the other eye. This may be done even if it has never had an attack.
CONGENITAL GLAUCOMA
- Congenital glaucoma is almost always treated with surgery.
- This is done using general anesthesia. This means the child is asleep and feels no pain.
SECONDARY GLAUCOMA
If you have secondary glaucoma, treating the cause may help your symptoms go away. Other treatments also may be needed.
Outlook (Prognosis)
Open-angle glaucoma cannot be cured. You can manage it and keep your sight by following your eye doctor's directions.
Closed-angle glaucoma is a medical emergency. You need treatment right away to save your vision.
Babies with congenital glaucoma usually do well when surgery is done early.
How you do with secondary glaucoma depends on what is causing the condition.
When to Contact a Medical Professional
If you have severe eye pain or a sudden loss of vision, get immediate medical help. These may be signs of closed-angle glaucoma.
Prevention
You cannot prevent open-angle glaucoma. Most people have no symptoms. There is uncertainty about the best way to screen for open-angle glaucoma. But you can help prevent vision loss.
- A complete eye exam can help find open-angle glaucoma early, when it is easier to treat.
- All adults should have a complete eye exam by the age of 40.
- If you are at risk for glaucoma, you should have a complete eye exam sooner than age 40.
- You should have regular eye exams as recommended by your health care provider.
If you are at risk for closed-angle glaucoma, your provider may recommend treatment before you have an attack to help prevent eye damage and vision loss.
Reviewed By
Audrey Tai, DO, MS, Athena Eye Care, Mission Viejo, CA. Also reviewed by David C. Dugdale, MD, Medical Director, Brenda Conaway, Editorial Director, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team.
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