| Q: What is glaucoma?
Glaucoma is a group of diseases that damage the optic nerve
and can result in loss of the visual field or blindness if
left untreated. The damage is progressive. It begins with
a loss of peripheral vision, moves to reductions in the center
of the visual field, and eventually leads to blindness. The
progression of glaucoma can be stopped. However, damage to
the optic nerve and the subsequent losses of vision are permanent.
The damage to the optic nerve is associated
with elevated pressures of aqueous fluid within the eye. The
major types of the disease include primary open-angle, angle-closure,
several forms of secondary, congenital, juvenile, and low-
or normal-tension glaucoma.
Q: How many people have glaucoma?
Nearly 2.2 million Americans 40 years of age and older have
the most common form of glaucoma. About half of them are not
aware that they have the disease.
Q: Is glaucoma a significant cause of
blindness?
Yes. It is one of the leading causes of blindness, accounting
for up to 12% of all cases of blindness in the United States.
Q: Who is at risk of developing glaucoma?
- People of African or Asian ancestry are
at a higher risk for glaucoma than whites. Glaucoma is the
leading cause of blindness among blacks and is 6 to 8 times
more common in blacks than in whites.
- People with a history of glaucoma in their
immediate family.
- People with high internal eye pressure;
however, some people with normal internal eye pressure may
still suffer optic nerve damage, which results in loss of
vision.
- Diabetics have an increased risk of
developing glaucoma.
Q: How is glaucoma detected?
Screening tests are most likely to detect glaucoma in its
early stages. If physicians find that a patient has high internal
eye pressure or there appears to be damage to the optic nerve
during a screening examination, additional testing will be
needed to make a final diagnosis. Those tests include measuring
intraocular pressure, measuring the thickness of the cornea,
mapping the field of peripheral vision, optic nerve and retinal
imaging, and examining the angle in the eye from which aqueous
fluid normally drains.
Q: What are the symptoms of glaucoma?
One of the most serious concerns about
glaucoma is that it often has no symptoms or signs in its
early stages. In the later stages of the disease, some of
the following symptoms may be present:
- Headache
- Blurred vision
- Loss of peripheral vision
- An inability to adjust the eye to the level
of light in darkened rooms
- Difficulty focusing on close work
- Rainbow-colored rings or halos around lights
- Frequent need to change eyeglass prescriptions.
Q: How is glaucoma treated?
Glaucoma is managed through the use of medications, lasers,
and surgical procedures, or a combination of the three. All
therapies reduce internal eye pressure by slowing the production
of aqueous fluid, increasing the outflow of aqueous from the
eye, or both. Although all forms of therapy have risks, the
risks are outweighed by the fact that failure to control glaucoma
will result in blindness.
Q: Is there a cure for glaucoma?
No. Vision that has been lost to the disease cannot be recovered.
However, drugs and, if necessary, lasers and surgery can be
used to stop the progress of the disease.
Q: What is the best way to prevent vision
loss from glaucoma?
Early detection through regular eye examinations. Everyone,
even those not at risk for glaucoma, should have a regular
eye examination every 2 years after age 40. During those examinations,
physicians will routinely screen patients for glaucoma. For
Medicare beneficiaries, Medicare will pay the costs of an
annual dilated eye examination for people with diabetes, those
with a family history of glaucoma, and African Americans aged
50 years and older.
Q: What kind of physician treats
glaucoma?
Ophthalmologists (medical doctors who specialize in treating
the eye) who have sub-specialized in treating glaucoma treat
all of the many forms of the disease with a variety of drugs,
lasers, and filtration microsurgery procedures. If you would
like to locate an ophthalmologist who specializes in treating
glaucoma, click
here. |