So what exactly is glaucoma, and what should you do if you think you have it?
Glaucoma and Its Symptoms
Glaucoma is a condition that develops when there is too much fluid pressure within the eyes. This pressure damages the optic nerve, which is the main nerve that transmits images to our brains. Therefore, when the damaged optic nerve is left unchecked, the continued pressure will cause blindness. That blindness can become permanent after a few years if the glaucoma is still left untreated.
Typically, individuals over the age of 40 and who have a family history of glaucoma are most likely to suffer from it. Glaucoma is also prevalent in African-American, Irish, Russian, and Hispanic populations. The disease is also common in those individuals who suffer from diabetes, and who take certain steroid medicines. It’s recommended that these individuals immediately seek an appointment with an eye doctor to check for glaucoma.
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Symptoms of glaucoma include loss of vision, seeing halos around lights, eye redness, nausea, headaches, eye pain, and tunnel vision.
Treatments for Glaucoma
Depending on the type of disease you have, your eye specialist will use the following treatments for glaucoma:
- Drops are usually the first line of defense against glaucoma, which must be taken one, two, even four times a day, depending on the type of glaucoma.
- Selective Laser Trabeculoplasty (SLT) may be used to treat glaucoma. SLT is a relatively new…
- laser treatment for open-angle glaucoma, but it is much less traumatic to the eye than Argon Laser Trabeculoplasty (ALT), which had been the standard laser procedure for glaucoma. This procedure eligible for newly diagnosed patients who don’t want to take drops; existing glaucoma patients who are using one or more drops and would like to reduce or eliminate them altogether; long-standing glaucoma patients who have been treated with the argon laser and whose pressures are rising. Click here to learn more about Selective Laser Trabeculoplasty (SLT).
If you’ve experienced any of the symptoms described above, or you’re at-risk for developing glaucoma, see your eye doctor.
To read more articles on eye health from Dr. Bovelle, click here.