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Facts About Open-Angle Glaucoma
Open-angle glaucoma is the most common form of glaucoma, an eye disease that is a leading cause of blindness in the United States and the number one cause of blindness in Blacks. Although early treatment can substantially reduce the likelihood of severe vision loss or blindness, many people at higher risk for blindness from glaucoma are unaware of the importance of early detection, or are not having their eyes examined on a regular basis for the disease. Increased public awareness of the potential benefits of a regular, comprehensive eye examination with dilated pupils is crucial to reduce the enormous social and personal costs of open-angle glaucoma. How does open-angle glaucoma affect
the eye? In an eye with open-angle glaucoma, the aqueous humor drains too slowly through the channel system, creating a chronic rise in fluid pressure inside the eye. This elevated pressure may gradually interrupt the metabolic processes of cells in the optic nerve, leading to a progressive destruction of nerve fibers that are essential for vision. Open-angle glaucoma is so called because the angle of the anterior chamber is open to aqueous humor outflow. It is the slow drainage of aqueous humor through the drainage system that increases fluid pressure. Conversely, in angle-closure glaucoma, part of the iris suddenly obstructs the angle and blocks the aqueous humor from reaching the drainage system. This causes a very painful rise in intraocular pressure and requires emergency medical attention. How many Americans have open-angle
glaucoma? What is the cost of blindness from
open-angle glaucoma? Who is at risk? The National Eye Institute-supported Baltimore Eye Survey shows that by age 70, about one in 50 Whites will have the disease. In Blacks, the problem is more severe. For example:
What are the symptoms of the disease? How is glaucoma detected? To dilate, or enlarge, the pupils, the eye care professional places medicated drops into the eye. By so doing, the practitioner can better examine the back of the eye for early signs of disease, such as optic nerve damage, before noticeable vision loss occurs. Tonometry is a common and painless test to measure intraocular pressure. In this test, an eye care professional uses an instrument called a tonometer to measure the fluid pressure in the anterior chamber. However, because elevated fluid pressure is only one characteristic of open-angle glaucoma, tonometry does not always indicate whether or not a person has the disease. In fact, many people with elevated fluid pressure never develop any form of glaucoma, while people with seemingly normal pressure during an examination will develop the disease. For this reason, tonometry should be viewed as one important component of the overall examination for glaucoma, but should not be the only test used to detect glaucoma. When indicated, a visual field test, also called perimetry, is used by the eye care professional to measure the patient's field of vision. This test is particularly important because it can detect a patient's early loss of peripheral vision, a sign of open-angle glaucoma. The National Eye Health Education Program recommends that people at higher risk undergo an eye examination through dilated pupils at least once every two years. How is glaucoma treated?
What research is being conducted on
glaucoma? Basic studies are also being conducted to learn more about the mechanisms of aqueous humor inflow and outflow, glaucomatous tissue changes in the optic nerve, and the dynamics of trabecular meshwork cells. Studies are being conducted to streamline current surgical procedures, improve surgical wound healing, understand the possible role of nutrition in preventing open-angle glaucoma, and improve diagnostic techniques. Through continued laboratory and clinical research, patients with open-angle glaucoma in the future should enjoy an even greater range of treatment options that will help spare them progressive loss of vision.
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