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Chronic open-angle glaucoma:
This is the most
common form of glaucoma.
The risk of developing chronic open-angle
glaucoma increases with age. The
drainage angle of the eye becomes less
efficient over time, and pressure within
the eye gradually increases, which can
damage the optic nerve. In some
patients, the optic nerve becomes
sensitive even to normal eye pressure
and is at risk for damage. Treatment is
necessary to prevent further vision
loss.
Typically, open-angle glaucoma has no
symptoms in its early stages, and vision
remains normal. As the optic nerve
becomes more damaged, blank spots begin
to appear in your field of vision. You
typically won’t notice these blank spots
in your day-to-day activities until the
optic nerve is significantly damaged
(nearly 80%) and these spots become
large. If all the optic nerve fibers
die. Blindness results.
Closed-angle glaucoma:
This form of glaucoma is perhaps more
common in our country than in other
parts of the world.
Some eyes are formed with the iris (the
coloured part of the eye) too
close to the drainage angle. In these
eyes which are often small and
farsighted, the iris tissue encroaches
into the drainage angle and blocks it so
that the fluid cannot exit the eye. The
intraocular pressure rises rapidly and
causes an acute closed angle attack. |