Glaucoma is a group of eye disorders in which damage to the optic
nerve causes some vision loss. There are three basic types of glaucoma.
Open-angle glaucoma
Open-angle glaucoma (OAG) is the most common type of glaucoma. In
open-angle glaucoma, slow damage to the nerve in the back of the eye (optic
nerve) causes gradual loss of eyesight. At first, the person loses side or
outer (peripheral) vision. If open-angle glaucoma is not treated, vision loss
continues until total blindness develops.
This type of glaucoma can occur in both eyes at the same time.
However, often one eye is more severely affected than the other. Sometimes much
of the person's eyesight is affected before the condition is noticed.
- Open-angle glaucoma has been called simple
glaucoma, chronic glaucoma, and wide-angle glaucoma.
- Many people
with open-angle glaucoma have higher-than-normal pressure in their eyes.
However, some people with open-angle glaucoma have normal pressure in their
eyes. This type is called low-tension or normal-tension glaucoma.
Closed-angle glaucoma
Closed-angle glaucoma (CAG) may cause sudden blurred vision with
pain and redness, usually in one eye first. In closed-angle glaucoma, the
coloured part of the eye (iris) and the lens block the movement of fluid between
the chambers of the eye. The blockage of fluid causes pressure to build and
makes the iris press on the drainage system (trabecular
meshwork) of the eye (see an illustration of the
iris and
lens
). The increased pressure can cause damage to the optic nerve,
leading to vision loss and possible blindness. It is also sometimes referred to
as primary angle-closure glaucoma (PACG).
- See an illustration of
closed-angle glaucoma
.
Closed-angle glaucoma may cause sudden blurred vision with pain and
redness, usually in one eye first. See an illustration of possible
areas of
pain
associated with CAG.
- One type of closed-angle glaucoma (acute
closed-angle glaucoma) can be an emergency situation and usually needs
immediate medical care to prevent permanent damage to the affected eye. The
opposite eye is also usually examined and eventually treated because the
condition could affect the other eye in the future.
- Some people
develop a form of closed-angle glaucoma called subacute angle-closure glaucoma.
If you have this form of glaucoma, you have brief episodes of symptoms that
develop and then go away on their own without treatment. But, over time, these
episodes damage your eyesight and the drainage system in your eyes.
- Closed-angle
glaucoma can also become a long-term problem (chronic angle-closure glaucoma).
Chronic closed-angle glaucoma develops slowly over time.
Congenital glaucoma
Congenital glaucoma is a rare form of glaucoma that is present in
babies at birth. It is often caused by a birth defect that can cause abnormal
development of structures in the eye. Some birth defects may develop because of
an inherited condition, such as
neurofibromatosis or
Marfan's syndrome.
- Congenital glaucoma is usually diagnosed by the
end of the first year of life. About one-half of these children are diagnosed
at birth.
- Congenital glaucoma must be treated as soon as possible
to avoid loss of eyesight or blindness.
- Glaucoma that develops between birth and age 3 is called
infantile glaucoma.
- People between the ages of 3 and young
adulthood can develop another type of developmental glaucoma called juvenile
glaucoma.
Glaucoma can also be classified as:
- Primary glaucoma. Primary glaucoma refers to glaucoma
that is not caused by another eye or medical condition.
- Secondary glaucoma. Secondary glaucoma refers to
glaucoma that develops as a result of another condition.
- Secondary glaucoma may develop as a result of
eye injury or eye tumours or after eye surgery.
- Secondary glaucoma
can develop as a complication of a disease, such as diabetes. Diabetes can
cause new blood vessels to grow into the
drainage angle of the eye (trabecular meshwork) and
create scarring. This scarring can limit drainage of the fluid (aqueous humour) out of
the eye. This blood vessel problem is called neovascular glaucoma.
- Certain medications (corticosteroids) may cause secondary
glaucoma when they are used to treat eye inflammation and other diseases. They
unintentionally cause a rise in pressure within the eye.
- Glaucoma
may develop as a result of the breakdown and flaking off of the colouring
(pigment) found in the iris and the part of the eye that produces fluid
(ciliary body). These flakes of pigment block the fluid drainage system of the
eye. This type of secondary glaucoma is called pigmentary
glaucoma.
- Another type of common secondary glaucoma can occur when
a different type of flaky material is produced in the eye. The origin of this
white, flaky material is not clearly known but it can block the fluid drainage
system of the eye. This type of secondary glaucoma is called pseudoexfoliation
glaucoma or exfoliation syndrome
- A set of diseases called the ICE syndrome affect the iris and cornea and can cause glaucoma.
Health professionals classify glaucoma according to the severity of
the disease.1
- Ocular hypertension. Consistently elevated pressure
inside the eye (greater than 21 millimetres of mercury [mm Hg]) without any
evidence of damage to the optic nerve or loss of visual field is called ocular
hypertension. Some people with ocular hypertension may still need treatment if
the pressure in the eye is high enough to pose a risk of damaging the optic
nerve over the long term.
- Mild glaucoma. Mild glaucoma refers to optic nerve
damage with a normal visual field or minimal loss of outer (peripheral) vision.
If there are signs of optic nerve damage without visual loss, the person may be
considered as possibly having glaucoma (a glaucoma suspect).
- Moderate glaucoma. Moderate glaucoma refers to optic
nerve damage with moderate loss of vision in at least one eye. However, sight
in the centre of the eye (central vision) is not affected in moderate
glaucoma.
- Severe glaucoma. Severe glaucoma refers to optic
nerve damage with loss of vision in both eyes or loss of sight in one eye that
includes central vision loss.