Glaucoma Flashcards
What is glaucoma?
Group of eye disease causing progressive occular neuropathy
Raised Intra-occular pressure is important modifiable risk factor (not cause)
What is the prevalence of glaucoma?
Common (worldwide ca. 45 million)
Second leading cause of blindness
- 1/3 angle-closure glaucoma, which is more likely in women aged 55-65 and asian population
- Primary open-angle glaucoma 70% of cases
What are the different types of glaucoma that someone could present with?
- Open angle glaucoma
- Primary (70% of cases)
- Secondary (due to underyling disease, rare)
- Angle-closure glaucoma 1/3 of cases
- Primary (more common)
- Secondary
- Normal/Low Tension Glaucoma
What is a Primary-open angle glaucoma?
Glaucoma with raised intra-ocular pressure due to reduced drainage in anterior chamber
- Blocked Trabecular meshwork
- Might also be due to increased production of aqueous humor
What is a primary angle-closure glaucoma?
- Angle between cornea and iris is at least partially closed –> no drainage of aqueous humour from posterior to anterior chamber of eye
- Increased intra-ocular pressure
What is the reason for a normal/ low tension glaucoma?
Not known, no increased intra-ocular pressure
- Possibly due to hypoperfusion of optic nerve or genetic hypersensitivity of pressure that are in normal range
How does raised intra-ocular pressure predispoes to glaucoma?
Raised intra-ocular pressure might cause damage to the retinal ganglion
What ar symptoms of primary open-angle glaucoma
initially asymptomatic
- might cause peripheral visual field
- Progression into central visual field loss
What are risk factors for the development of glaucoma?
- Raised intra-ocular pressure (>21mmHg)
- Trauma/surgery
- For open-angle
- >40years
- African descent
- DM
- Myopia
- FH
What are Symptoms of angle-closure glaucoma?
Sudden onset, severe raised intra-cranial pressure leading to
- Eye pain
- Redness
- Blurry vision
- Headache
- Nausea and vomiting
What are signs on examination of open-angle glaucoma?
- Cupping of optic disc
- Pallor of optic disc with kinked vessels at edges of optic disc
What are signs of angle-closure glaucoma on examination?
fixed, dilated pupil that is minimally responsive to light and cupping of the optic disc
Which investigations would you order in a patient with suspected glaucoma?
- Tonometry - assess intra-occular pressure
- normal 14-21 mmHg
- Visual field testing
- Might see signs of peripheral vision loss
- Imaging for optic nerve damage
- Or direct observation “cupping”