Glaucoma is a condition
that causes damage to your eye's optic nerve and gets worse over time. It's
often associated with a buildup of pressure inside the eye. Glaucoma tends to
be inherited and may not show up until later in life.
What Are the Types of Glaucoma?
Who Gets Glaucoma?
What Are the Symptoms of
Glaucoma?
What Is the Outlook for People With
Glaucoma?
The increased pressure,
called intraocular pressure, can damage the optic nerve, which transmits images
to the brain. If damage to the optic nerve from high eye pressure continues,
glaucoma will cause permanent loss of vision. Without treatment, glaucoma can
cause total permanent blindness within a few years.Whatever vision loss is
caused because of glaucoma is IRREVERSIBLE. Hence early diagnosis and treatment
of Glaucoma is of paramout importance.
Because most people with
glaucoma have no early symptoms or pain from this increased pressure, it is
important to see your eye doctor regularly so that glaucoma can be diagnosed
and treated before long-term visual loss occurs.
If you are over age 40 and
have a family history of glaucoma, you should have a complete eye exam with an
eye doctor every one to two years. If you have health problems such as diabetes
or a family history of glaucoma or are at risk for other eye diseases, you may
need to visit your eye doctor more frequently.
Glaucoma usually occurs
when pressure in your eye increases. This can happen when eye fluid isn't
circulating normally in the front part of the eye.
Normally, this fluid,
called aqueous humor, flows out of the eye through a mesh-like channel. If this
channel becomes blocked, fluid builds up, causing glaucoma. The direct cause of
this blockage is unknown, but doctors do know that it can be inherited, meaning
it is passed from parents to children.Hence if the amount of fluid outflow is
less than inflow then there is fluid accumulation , leading to pressure buildup
leading to damage of the optic nerve.this is Glaucoma.
Less common causes of
glaucoma include a blunt or chemical injury to the eye, severe eye infection,
blockage of blood vessels in the eye, inflammatory conditions of the eye, and
occasionally eye surgery to correct another condition. Glaucoma usually occurs
in both eyes, but it may involve each eye to a different extent.
What Are the Types of Glaucoma?
There are two main
types of glaucoma:
Open-angle glaucoma. Also called
wide-angle glaucoma, this is the most common type of glaucoma. The structures
of the eye appear normal, but fluid in the eye does not flow properly through
the drain of the eye, called the trabecular meshwork.
Angle-closure
glaucoma. Also
called acute or chronic angle-closure or narrow-angle glaucoma, this type of
glaucoma is less common in the West than in Asia. Poor drainage is caused
because the angle between the iris and the cornea is too narrow and is
physically blocked by the iris. This condition leads to a sudden buildup of
pressure in the eye.
Who Gets Glaucoma?
Glaucoma most often
occurs in adults over age 40, but it can also occur in young adults, children,
and even infants. In African-Americans, glaucoma occurs more frequently and at
an earlier age and with greater loss of vision.
You are at an
increased risk of glaucoma if you:
·
Are of
African-American, Irish, Russian, Japanese, Hispanic, Inuit, or Scandinavian
descent
·
Are over
age 40
·
Have a
family history of glaucoma
·
Have poor
vision
·
Have
diabetes
·
Take
certain steroid medications, such as prednisone
·
Have had
trauma to the eye or eyes
What Are the Symptoms of
Glaucoma?
For most people,
there are usually few or no symptoms of glaucoma. The first sign of glaucoma is
often the loss of peripheral or side vision, which can go unnoticed until late
in the disease. This is why glaucoma is often called the "sneak thief of
vision."
Detecting glaucoma
early is one reason you should have a complete exam with an eye specialist every
one to two years. Occasionally, intraocular pressure can rise to severe levels.
In these cases, sudden eye pain, headache, blurred vision, or the appearance of
halos around lights may occur.
If you have any of
the following symptoms, seek immediate medical care:
·
Seeing
halos around lights
·
Vision
loss
·
Redness
in the eye
·
Eye that
looks hazy (particularly in infants)
·
Nausea or
vomiting
·
Pain in
the eye
·
Narrowing
of vision (tunnel vision)
How
Is Glaucoma Diagnosed?
To diagnose glaucoma, an
eye doctor will test your vision and examine your eyes through dilated pupils.
The eye exam typically focuses on the optic nerve, which has a particular
appearance in glaucoma. In fact, photographs of the optic nerve can also be
helpful to follow over time as the optic nerve appearance changes with the
progression of the disease. The doctor will also perform a procedure called
tonometry to check for eye pressure,Gonioscopy, and a visual field test
(Perimetry), if necessary, to determine if there is loss of side vision.
Glaucoma tests are painless and take very little time.
How
Is Glaucoma Treated?
Glaucoma treatment may
include prescription eye drops, laser surgery, or microsurgery.
·
Eye drops for glaucoma. These
either reduce the formation of fluid in the front of the eye or increase its
outflow. Side effects of glaucoma drops may include allergy, redness of the
eyes, brief stinging, blurred vision, and irritated eyes. Some glaucoma drugs
may affect the heart and lungs. Be sure to tell your doctor about any other
medications you are currently taking or are allergic to.
·
Laser surgery for glaucoma. Laser
surgery for glaucoma slightly increases the outflow of the fluid from the eye
in open-angle glaucoma or eliminates fluid blockage in angle-closure glaucoma.
Types of laser surgery for glaucoma include trabeculoplasty, in which a laser
is used to pull open the trabecular meshwork drainage area; iridotomy, in which
a tiny hole is made in the iris, allowing the fluid to flow more freely; and
cyclophotocoagulation, in which a laser beam treats areas of the middle layer
of the eye, reducing the production of fluid.
·
Microsurgery for glaucoma. In
an operation called a trabeculectomy, a new channel is created to drain the
fluid, thereby reducing intraocular pressure that causes glaucoma. Sometimes
this form of glaucoma surgery fails and must be redone. For some patients, a
glaucoma implant is the best option. Other complications of microsurgery for
glaucoma include some temporary or permanent loss of vision, as well as
bleeding or infection.
Open-angle glaucoma is most
commonly treated with various combinations of eye drops, laser trabeculoplasty,
and microsurgery. Traditionally world over , medications are used first, but
there is increasing evidence that some people with glaucoma may respond better
with early laser surgery or microsurgery.
Infant or congenital
glaucoma -- meaning you are born with it -- is primarily treated with surgery,
because the cause of the problem is a very distorted drainage system.
Talk to your eye doctor to
find out which glaucoma treatment is right for you.
Can Glaucoma Be Prevented?
Glaucoma cannot be prevented, but if it is diagnosed
and treated early, the disease can be controlled
.
What Is the Outlook for People With
Glaucoma?
At this time, loss of vision caused by
glaucoma is irreversible and cannot be restored. However, successfully lowering
eye pressure can help prevent further visual loss from glaucoma. Most people
with glaucoma do not go blind if they follow their treatment plan and have
regular eye exams.