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Glaucoma |
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Charlotte, North Carolina Glaucoma is a name for a group of progressive eye diseases, and when they are left untreated they will cause blindness. In March 2008, the first World Glaucoma Day took place, in an effort to educate people about glaucoma and its dangers. You may have heard radio spots or seen television announcements about it. Glaucoma is related to the eye’s internal pressure, which becomes too high. Our eyes are filled with fluid, and have a natural drainage system. The eyes continually produce new fluid to replace what drains out. In a glaucomatous eye, the optic nerve is damaged. When too much builds up and exerts increased pressure outwards against the eye’s wall. The Optic Nerve The inside back surface of each eye is known as the retina, and it is filled with light-sensitive cells. Light enters the eyes carrying image information, and in a 20/20 eye it focuses clearly on the retina. This forms tiny upside-down images of what you are looking at. The retinal cells convert this to electrical energy. The large optic nerve exits from the back of each eye and carries this energy to the brain’s vision center at the back of the head. When intraocular pressure is too high, damage is caused to the optic nerve, where it leaves the back of the eye. This is irreversible damage. Now the optic nerve cannot carry full information to the brain, and the brain cannot interpret it to give you a full picture of what’s in your line of sight. A Silent Disease Glaucoma gradually steals the peripheral vision. If it is left untreated, the field of vision becomes progressively smaller until blindness results. That means early diagnosis is crucial for saving your vision. There are no symptoms at first. We typically focus on what we want to see, and do not fully notice what’s in the peripheral vision. There is no pain, no infection, no discharge, no redness. Nor is there any cure. Who is at Risk for Glaucoma? Anyone could get glaucoma, but some groups are at greater risk than others:
There are other groups with increased chances of glaucoma, though not as dramatically so:
Even if you are not in any of these increased-risk categories of people, it would be wise to have a glaucoma check at about the age of 40. Glaucoma is typically treated with eyedrops. If your eye doctor finds any damage to the optic nerve (called “cupping”), and/or any loss of peripheral vision, your accompanying vision loss can be stopped if you begin using the eyedrops. For glaucoma that does not respond to the eyedrops, Horizon's fellowship trained glaucoma surgeons off the latest in surgical procedures. Our glaucoma ophthalmologists are: Joseph H. Krug, Jr., MDDavid L. Smith, MD Please call or email our Charlotte, N.C. office if you would like to learn more about glaucoma, and have your eyes checked. We urge you not to delay this, for the sake of your own vision.
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