Glaucoma
Glaucoma
Glaucoma
Sx
- IOP (30-70)
- Acute eye pain
- Headache, n/v
- Acute VA drop, halos
- Ciliary injection
Ddx
- Phacomorphic/anterior lens dislocation(ectopia lentis)/phacolytic
- Uveitic glaucoma
- NVG
- Malignant glaucoma
- Posterior segment pathology
- Possner Schossman syndrome
Hx
- Gender, age
- Symptoms and duration of painful red eye
Predisposing factors
- Anti-cholinergic medication (flu med, antitussive)
- Dense cataract
- Previous attack (Uveitis, PSS, intermittent PACG)
- Recent ocular surgery
- Refractive error, hypermetropia
- Trauma
- Retinal vascular disease (CRVO, PDMR), new vessels formation
Medical hx
- Renal failure
- Asthma
- COPD
- Arrythmia, heart disease
- DM, HT
- Allergy, allergy to sulphonamides (indapamide, Topiramite)
O/E
- VA
- IOP
- Slit lamp
o Diffuse ciliary injection
o Cornea edema
o Shallow AC (unequal AC depth)
o AC activity, ACC, KP
o Iris bombe / PS / pupil block
o Fixed, mid dilated irregular pupil
o NVI
o Hypermature/swollen cataract
o Lens instability
o Glaucomflecken
- Gonioscopy (if corneal edema/IOP controlled)
o Narrow angle
o PAS
o NV of angle
o <Post PI goni+/- indentation>
Differentiate synechiae vs appositional closure
Any degree of PAS
- Fundus
o Posterior pushing mechanism (e.g. Choroidal mass)
o Vertical cup to disc ratio
o Disc colour
o Retinal rim integrity
o Retinal pathology
Ix
- RFT
- B scan (if no fundal view)
- UBM (if angle status not verified by goni)
o Ciliary body / peripheral choroid abnormalities
IOP control
1) Systemic IOP lowering med
2) Topical anti glaucoma med
3) ALPI (APAC & acute phacomorphic angle closure)
Check IOP few hours later
IOP controlled
- Phacomorphic early cat extraction
- APAC BE laser PI early cat
- NVG and PSS OPD FU + treat underlying pathology
IOP not controlled
- IV mannitol 20% 200ml over ½ hour
- ALPI x APAC / acute phacomorphic
- AC paracentesis / early drainage (TBx + MMC)
Medication
ALPI
Contraction Burns
- Long duration
- Low power
- Large spot size
Angle closure
4 anatomical position
- Lens Phacomorphic
- Posterior chamber (pupillary block)
- Ciliary body (plateau iris) younger/can closure in spite of patient PI
o Med/PI/ALPI/treb/drainage
- Posterior to lens (malignant glaucoma)
PACG
RFs
- Asians
- Ocular biometrics
- Age (increase after 40, increase lens thickness)
- Women (2-3x)
- Family history (ABCC5 gene, reduced ACD)
- Hyperopia
o If ACG in high myopia secondary mechanisms:
o Microspherophakia, plateau iris, phacomorphic (NS)
Phacomorphic
- Lens intumescenece (swelling) pp pupillary block
- Cholinergic/miotic agent minimal role as they may further narrow the angle
Ectopia lentis causes
- Pseudoexfoliation*
- Trauma
- Marfan
- Homocysteinuria
- Microspherophakia
- Ehlers Danlos
- Weill Marchesani syndrome
- Sulfite oxidase deficiency
NVG
- DR, CRVO, BRVO, OIS, chronic uveitis
- NVI PAS fibrovascular membrane contraction
- PAS end as Schwalbe line
ICE syndrome
- Iris atrophy, secondary angle closure, corneal edema
- Chandler syndrome, essential iris atrophy, Cogen Reese (iris nevus)
- Unilateral, middle aged, women
- Corneal endothelium “beaten bronze” apperanace
- High PAS anterior to Schwalbe line
Tumours
- Posterior segment tumour
o Primary choroidal melanomas
o Ocular metastases
o RB
- Anterior uveal cysts
Inflammation
- Uveitis
Malignant glaucoma
- Post ocular surgery
- Hx of angle closure / PAS
- Uniform flat central and peripheral AC
- Anterior rotation of the ciliary body and posterior misdirection of aqueous
Nonrhegmatogenous RD and uveal effusions
- (Vs rhegmatogenous RD subretinal fluid can escape through the tear_
- Nonrhegmatogenous fluid accumulate SOL in vitreous
Epithelial and fibrous ingrowth
Trauma
Retinal surgery, retinal vascular disease
Nanopthalmos
Persistent fetal vasculature, ROP
- Contracting retrolental tissue
Flat AC
- Can form PAS
Flat AC from postop / filtering sugery with leak
Drug induced
- Topiramate (epilepsy)
o Acute myopic shift + acute bilateral angle closure
o Choroidal effusion?
<Clinical evaluation>
Hx
- Pain, redness, halos, vision
- DM/cardiac/pulmonary/HT/hypotension/sleep apnea/Raynaud/migraine/renal
stones/pregnancy
Refraction
- Hyperopia ACG, smaller optic disc
- Myopia optic nerve head morphology, pigment dispersion
External adnexae
- Tuberous sclerosis (Bourneville syndrome)
o Ash leaf sign, adenoma sebaceum VH/NV/RD glaucoma
- Type 1 NF subcutaneous plexiform neuromas
- Juvenile xanthogranuloma yellow/orange papules
- Oculodermal melanocytosis
Raised episcleral venous pressure
- Sturge weber syndrome port wine stain
- Klippel Trenaunay weber syndrome cutaneous hemangiomas
- Orbital varices
- AV fistula
- Superior vena cava syndrome
- Carotid cavernous, dural cavernous, AV fistula
- TED
Pupils
- Size
- Pupillary response, RAPD
- Corectopia, ectropion uveae, pupillary abnormalities
- Colour vision/EOM/CN nonglaucoma vs glaucomatous optic neuropathy
Conjunc
- Conj hyperemia (prostaglandin, sympathomimetics)
- Allergic reaction to alpha adrenergic
- Filtering bleb
Cornea
- Breaks in DM (Haab striae) in developmental glaucoma
- PEE (medication toxicity)
- Microcystic epithelial edema (acute elevated IOP)
Others
- Krukenberg spindle (pigmentary glaucoma)
- Exfoliative material (pseudoexfoliation)
- KP (uveitic glaucoma)
- Irregular and vesicular lesions (posterior polymorphous dystrophy)
- Beaten bronze appearance (ICE)
- Large posterior embryotoxon (Axenfeld Rieger syndrome)
Pachymetry
AC
- Deep centrally, shallow peripherally (iris bombe and plateau iris)
- Flat (aqueous misdirection and other posterior pushing mechanism)
- Irregular iris surface contour
o Iris masses, choroidal effusions, trauma
- Cells, RBS, pigment
Iris
- Heterochromia
- Iris atrophy
- Transillumination defects (PSX at margin, PDS in mid spoke like)
- Ectropion uveae
- Corectopia
- Nevi
- Nodules
- Exfoliative material
- Evidence of trauma
- NV
Lens
- Phacodonesis
- Pseudoexfoliation
- Subluxation
- Dislocation
Fundus
- Cells, hemorrhage, ghost cells
- Optic nerve head
- Hemorrhage/effusion/masses/retinovascular occlusions, DR, RD
Goni
- Normally light reflected from the angle undergoes total internal reflection at the tear
air interface (46 degree)
- Direct (Koeppe), mirrored indirect (Goldmann / Zeiss)
- Schwalbe line, TM, scleral spur, ciliary body
Corneal light wedge (parallelepiped) technique
- To determine the position of Schwalbe line
- Exact junction of cornea and TM
- Narrow slit beam 2 linear reflections meet at Schwalbe line
Othres
- PAS
Shaffer and Spaeth systems
- Grade 4 (45), Grade 3 (20-45), Grade 2 (20), Grade 1 (10), Slit (<10)
Trauma
- Angle recession (tear between longitudinal and circular muscles of ciliary body)
- Cyclodialysis (separation of ciliary body and scleral spur)
- Iridodialysis (tear in root of iris)
- Trabecular damage
Optic nerve
- Neural tissue, glial tissue, connective tissue, blood vessels
- 1.2 million axons of retinal ganglion cells
Intraorbital optic nerve
- Anterior ON (retinal surface to retrolaminar region)
- Posterior ON (
- Diameter 1.5mm expands to 3-4mm immediately upon exiting the globe
o Due to axonal myelination, glial tissue, beginning of leptomeninges
RGCs
- Magnocellular neurons (M cells)
- Parvocellular neurons (P cells)
- Koniocellular neurons (Bistratified cells)
Anterior ON 4 layers
- Nerve fiber continuous with NFL of retina
- Prelaminar
- Laminar continuous with sclera, composed of lamina cribrosa
- Retrolaminar beginning of axonal myelination
Connective tissue density within the lamina
- Lesser superiorly and inferiorly (vs temporal and nasal)
Blood supply
- Ophthalmic artery (via 1-5 posterior ciliary arteries)
- Posterior ciliary arteries medial and lateral group short posterior ciliary arteries
supply peripapillary choroid and anterior optic nerve
- Circle of Zinn-Haller (non continuous arterial circle)
Central retinal artery
- Has few intraneural branches (occ small branch within the retrolaminar region
may anastomose with the pial system
ON head examination
- Tissue between cup and disc marign = neuroretinal rim
- Large disc large cup (0.7 ratio may be normal for a large ON)
Ddx of cupping
- Congenital pits
- Coloboma
- Morning glory syndrome
- Arteritic ischemic neuropathy
- Compressive optic neuropathy
- Myopic
-
OCT
Confocal
Scanning laser polarimeter
Visual field/perimetry
- Central 24 and 30 programs
- Humphrey 24-2 and 30-2
Pattern
- Arcuate scotom
- Nasal step
- Paracentral scotoma
- Altitudinal defect
- Generalised depression (rare)
- Temporal wedge (rare)
<Open-angle glaucoma>
Diagnosis
- Optic nerve head appearance
- VF testing
- RNFL
RFs
- IOPs
- Older age
- Age
- Race (Blacks)
- Thin central corneal thickness
- Family history
- Myopia
Associated disorders
- DM
- HT for older patients
- Lower ocular perfusion pressure / overtreatment of HT
- Retinal vein occlusion NV of angle
Others
- Sleep apnea
- Thyroid
- Hypercholesterol
- Migraine
- Low CSF pressure
- Corneal hysteresis
- Raynaud
Glaucoma suspect
- Suspicious ON / NFL appearance BUT no VF defect, or
- VF defect suggestive of glaucoma BUT no ON abnormality
Ocular hypertension
- Elevated IOP BUT no ON, RNFL, or VF abnormalities
- RFs for progression
o Age
o IOP
o Thinner corneas
o Larger cup disc ratio at baseline
o Higher pattern standard devation on perimetry
Pseudoexfoliation
- LOX1
- ** old age >50-70
- Pseudoexfoliative material in anterior lens capule (Bulls eye)
- Deposits in pupillary margin + ?TID
- Sampaolesi line
- Fibrillar material in TM impede outflow
Intraocular tumours
Inflammatory / uveitic
- KPs
- PAS / PS
- Avoid miotic agent
o May exacerbate inflammation + formation of PS
Traumatic hyphema
Schwartz syndrome
- RRD
Drugs
- Steroid
o Less: fluorometholone, loteprednol
o More: prednisolone, dexamethasone
- Dilating drops
o Pseudoexfoliation, pigment dispersion
Glaucoma
Eyedrops
Trusopt vs Azopt
- Trusopt is way more irritative **
Xalatan vs Lumigan
- Xalatan cheaper, less blepharoconjunctivitis
- Lumigan more powerful
Change Daily to OM
Rechallenge
<Glaucoma>
How is it diagnosed
Incidental vs presentation
Presenting s/s: IOP, CDR, OCT
Where was it diagnosed
Alert
VA at presentation
Uncertain hx
Pale disc
Diagnosis based on OCT
?Dx in private
Thinning of RNFL
- ADEM
- MS
- TB meningitis
- Optic neuritis
Myopic
VF: relaiability
EDS
RP sine pigment
Red flags
- Age younger than 50
- VA less than 20/40 or rapid progression
- Disc with rim pallor
- RAPD / VA loss out of proportion
- Color vision asym impaired
- Vertically aligned visual field defect
- Mismatch between the degree of cupping and degree of VF loss
0.5 cup but 10 degree VF remaining
<2. Type of glaucoma>
Primary vs secondary
Angle closure vs open angle
Baseline/max IOP
Hx of uveitis/steroid/ocular surgery
Stage
Pre-perimetric (VF normal, OCT picked up)
Mild
Moderate
Severe
Advanced
24-4
- MD
- Pattern deviation map
- Proximity to fixation
Staging
MD 0
1-6
12
18
>18
Monitoring
Suprathreshold test
Manual: Aimark/Goldman
Suspicious disc
But OCT normal OCT in 1 year if both OCT normal GCC
Or directly GCC
Before discharge
Red disease
- Myopic double hump have temporal shift
- False positive picture
o Can do a macula ganglion cell complex analysis
Hyperope
- Nasal shift, can still red
TPA
Progression analysis
NTG target
OHT
5 year untreated OHT 8.8% of developing POAG
Treated 5.5% risk
Take into account of RFs
OHT calculator individualized risk
OHT
SLT and MLT
(baseline IOP low – good, virgin eye – not med good response)