Quick answer
What is glaucoma?
Glaucoma is a group of eye conditions damaging the optic nerve — often linked to raised eye pressure — causing gradual peripheral vision loss that can lead to blindness if untreated. Chronic open-angle glaucoma is commonest — usually no symptoms until advanced — picked up at routine optician eye tests. Acute angle-closure glaucoma is an emergency — sudden painful red eye, blurred vision, halos around lights, nausea — phone 999 or go to A&E. Treatment is daily eye drops (or laser/surgery) to lower pressure — lifelong. Over-40s should have regular optician checks every 2 years — free NHS tests if high risk.
Glaucoma — the silent sight thief
Glaucoma is progressive optic neuropathy — characteristic visual field loss — often associated with elevated intraocular pressure (IOP).
~700,000 UK — half undiagnosed — routine optician tests critical
Types
Primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG)
- Slow drainage angle open
- Insidious — peripheral field loss
- Painless
- Commonest in UK
Angle-closure glaucoma
- Acute — iris blocks drainage — IOP spikes
- Emergency — laser peripheral iridotomy
- Chronic angle-closure — similar to POAG
Secondary glaucoma
- Steroids, uveitis, trauma, pseudoexfoliation
Normal-tension glaucoma
- Optic nerve damage at normal IOP
- Treat to lower pressure anyway
Detection
Optician examination:
- Tonometry
- Gonioscopy (referral)
- Disc assessment — cup:disc ratio
- Visual fields
- OCT RNFL
NICE referral criteria — IOP, disc, field thresholds
Treatment
First-line drops:
- Prostaglandin analogues — latanoprost, tafluprost — evening dosing
- Side effect — lash growth, iris colour change
Add-on:
- Beta-blocker — timolol — respiratory caution
- Carbonic anhydrase inhibitor — dorzolamide
- Alpha agonist — brimonidine
Laser:
- SLT — repeatable — reduces drop burden
Surgery:
- Trabeculectomy, MIGS devices
Adherence matters
50% poor adherence — progression despite “on treatment”
Single combined bottles where possible
Remembering aids, pharmacy repeats
Driving
Notify DVLA if both eyes affected beyond monocular field standards
Visual field test — Esterman binoular
Over 40, no eye test 3 years — book optician — 10 minutes prevents tunnel vision forever.
Common questions
- What are the symptoms of glaucoma?
- Open-angle glaucoma — usually no symptoms early — gradual tunnel vision — peripheral loss unnoticed until advanced. Acute angle-closure — sudden severe eye pain, red eye, blurred vision, halos, headache, nausea, fixed mid-dilated pupil — emergency. Normal-tension glaucoma — optic nerve damage despite normal pressure.
- How is glaucoma detected?
- Optician measures eye pressure (tonometry), examines optic disc, visual field test, OCT scan of nerve fibre layer. Referral to ophthalmology if suspicious — confirms diagnosis and starts treatment. NHS eye tests detect many cases incidentally — reason for regular checks.
- How is glaucoma treated?
- Eye drops lowering intraocular pressure — prostaglandin analogues (latanoprost) first line, beta-blockers, alpha agonists, carbonic anhydrase inhibitors. Laser (SLT) or trabeculectomy surgery if drops insufficient. Treatment prevents further loss — cannot restore vision already lost. Lifelong monitoring.
- Who is at risk of glaucoma?
- Age over 40, family history, African-Caribbean ethnicity (open-angle), East Asian ethnicity (angle-closure), short-sightedness, diabetes, long-term steroid use, previous eye injury. Regular screening if risk factors.
- Can glaucoma be cured?
- No cure — but treatable to halt progression — many keep useful vision for life with adherence. Advanced glaucoma causes irreversible blindness — early detection at routine optician visit is key prevention.