Glaucoma Flashcards
Define glaucoma.
Glaucoma is due to increased pressure inside the eye, which is sufficiently elevated to cause optic nerve damage and result in visual field defects, with loss of sight .
What is normal intra-ocular pressure?
Normal intraocular pressure (IOP) is 10–21 mmHg. Some types of glaucoma can result in an IOP exceeding 70 mmHg
What is the epidemiology of glaucoma?
Second most common cause of blindness worldwide
Third most common cause of blind registration in the UK
What is primary open-angle glaucoma?
Most common form of glaucoma
IOP result from reduced outflow of aqueous humoue through the trabecular meshwork.
What are the risk factors for primary open-angle glaucoma?
- Age (20% of 80yr olds affected)
- Race (black africans x5 more at risk than caucasians)
- FH
- Myopia
What are the clinical features of POAG?
Gradual, insidious, painless loss of peripheral visual field causing loss of vision
Initially asymptomatic - identified in routine ophthalmic examination
Central vision remains good until end-stage disease
What are the clinical parameters which characterise POAG?
- increased intraocular pressure,
- increased cup to disc ratio (over 0.6 is probably glaucoma)
- visual field defects, detected by formal visual field testing (perimetry)
Treatment: prostaglandin analogue eye drops
How is POAG diagnosed?
By measuring IOP
Optic disc exam - enlarged cup with a thin neuroretinal rim
Visual field exam - normal blind spot with scotomas
What is acute angle-closure glaucoma?
Ophthalmic emergency - sudden rise in IOP to leves over 50mmHg. This occurs due to reduced aqueous drainage when teh ageing lens pushes the iris forwards against the trabecular meshwork.
What are the risk factors for acute angle closure glaucoma?
Shallow anterior chamber e.g. hypermetropes and women
Reduced light conditions (when pupil is dilated) - attack is more likely to occur.
What are the clinical features of AACG?
- Sudden onset red, painful eye with blurred vision.
- Patients become unwell - N&V
- Headache
- Severe ocular pain
- Eye is injected and tender and feels hard
- Hazy cornea
- Pupil is semi-dilated
What are the differential diagnoses of acute red eye and how do you distinguish between them?
What are the red flags for red eye which require urgent referral?
- Severe pain
- Photophobia
- Reduced vision, particularly if sudden
- Coloured halos around point of light in a patient’s vision
- Proptosis
- Smaller pupil in affected eye
- Plus on medical assessment:
- High intraocular pressure
- Corneal epithelial disruption
- Shallow anterior chamber depth
- Ciliary flush
What are these investigations called?
Fundoscopy may show disc cupping
Gonioscope in the top right – this device allows you to look at the angle of the iris to help determine if it is closed or open angle glaucoma
Slit lamp allows to examine the eye as a whole more closely
Tonometry in the bottom right measures intraocular pressure
What investigations would you do for AACG? What would the results show?
Gonioscopy (exam of anterior chamber) - definitive diagnostic test. Trabercular meshwork is not visible in angle closure because peripheral iris is in contact with it.
Slit-lamp examination - shallow anterior chamber; signs of glaucoma: large optic cup, narrowing of neuroretinal rim, splinter haemorrhage, nerve fibre loss.
Automatic static perimerty - visual field defects- identifies presence and amount of visual field loss.
Other tests:
- US biomicroscopy
- anterior segment optical coherence tomography (of angle)
- evaluation of optic nerve head by fundocsopy - may show large optic cup and nerve fibre loss
- retinal optical coherence tomography
- Heidelberg’s retinal tomography
- GDx nerve fibre analyser