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Am J OphthalmolMay 1996115 citations

Delayed functional loss in glaucoma. LII Edward Jackson Memorial Lecture.

Brubaker R F


AI Summary

This study explored why glaucoma patients lose vision despite normalized eye pressure, proposing four hypotheses including pressure-independent damage or cell hypersensitivity, suggesting apoptosis inhibition as a potential treatment.

Abstract

Purpose

This study is a systematic exploration of why some patients with glaucoma continue to lose visual field long after therapeutic normalization of their increased intraocular pressures.

Methods

Three cases of glaucoma are described that had increased intraocular pressures and good initial visual fields.

Results

The following four hypotheses are offered to explain delayed functional loss in these patients: (1) A process independent of intraocular pressure is killing ganglion cells. (2) Unmeasured increases of pressure are killing ganglion cells. (3) The ganglion cells have a genetically determined hypersensitivity to intraocular pressure. (4) The ganglion cells have been rendered hypersensitive to intraocular pressure by irreversible damaging effects of previously increased intraocular pressures

Conclusion

The current state of knowledge does not permit the elimination of any of the four hypotheses. An additional hypothesis is that the final stage of ganglion cell death is mediated by apoptosis. If so, a potential new treatment for glaucoma would be to inhibit the apoptotic pathway.


MeSH Terms

AdultApoptosisAwards and PrizesCell DeathFemaleGlaucomaHumansIntraocular PressureMaleMiddle AgedOphthalmologyRetinal Ganglion CellsSocieties, MedicalVision DisordersVisual Fields

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