What Is Glaucoma & Where Did It
Originate From?
Glaucoma is now
believed to be the end product of a number of distinct
structural and systemic diseases characterized by high pressure
inside the eye and optic nerve damage. This pressure can damage
and even kill the sensitive nerve cells in the back of the eye,
causing loss of sight. Glaucoma is not a new
disease. The ancient Greeks gave us the term glaucoma, which
they used to describe all eye diseases leading to blindness. In
the first several centuries A.D., cataracts, which are amenable
to treatment, began to be distinguished from glaucoma, which
could not be treated. The association of glaucoma with
increased pressure in the eye is often attributed to Richard
Banister, an English oculist and author of the first book on
ophthalmology in English, who made this observation in 1622 .
Banister noted that if you felt an eye with glaucoma by rubbing
on the eyelids, the eye felt more hard and solid than
normal.
Today, a diagnosis of Glaucoma is based on
three factors: intraocular pressure (IOF), the pressure within
the eye, which is typically elevated; characteristic changes in
the visual field, specifically a loss of peripheral vision; and
signs of damage to the optic nerve. Very often the first
indication that glaucoma may be present is an increase in IOP.
Since the 1930s, eye doctors have distinguished between two
primary forms of the disease: open-angle and narrow-angle
glaucoma. These determinations were based on the width of the
angle formed by the meeting of the iris and the cornea. Grades
I and II glaucoma (glaucoma in the presence of 10-degree and
20-degree angles, respectively) were designated narrow-angle
glaucoma; grades III and IV glaucoma (glaucoma in the presence
of 30-degree and 40-degree angles, respectively) were termed
open- angle glaucoma.
Angle-closure Glaucoma -
Glaucoma caused by a narrow angle and/or close
proximity of structures within the eye to each other - may be
considered a structural problem. Open-angle glaucoma is divided
into a number of different varieties. The most common type of
Glaucoma is primary open-angle
Glaucoma. The other glaucomas that make up the
open-angle family are variously called structural or secondary,
or glaucoma as an end product of a disease.
Today, researchers have recorded more than a dozen distinct
forms of glaucoma, and there may be more. Some scientists claim
that they can differentiate between as many as forty different
types of glaucoma. Although primary open-angle glaucoma
accounts for the majority of cases of glaucoma, many people do
have other forms. As the differences among glaucomas become
clearer, and the root causes are better identified, researchers
may be able to develop specific treatments for controlling each
individual type of glaucoma.
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