Describe the general approach.
Indicated in all patients diagnosed with open-angle glaucoma (even if asymptomatic)
Options include medical therapy, laser surgery, and open surgery
Topical prostaglandins are most effective and usually used initially; other drugs (with a different mechanism) may be added if topical prostaglandins are unsuccessful.
No decrease in IOP with one drug: Discontinue and replace with another drug or treatment option.
Partial response to one drug: Consider combination therapy with other glaucoma medications or switch to an alternative single-agent therapy.
Goal of therapy (target IOP): ≥ 25% decrease in pretreatment IOP
List important considerations regarding the pharmacotherapy.
Pharmacotherapy
The following regimen is the most commonly followed and is also effective in patients with chronic angle-closure glaucoma refractory to laser peripheral iridotomy (see ''Treatment'' in angle-closure glaucoma for further details).
Important considerations
Tailor regimen to the patient's comorbidities and tolerance.
Adherence to pharmacotherapy is crucial.
Advise patients to occlude their nasolacrimal ducts following the topical administration of drugs.
Patients should be continually assessed for disease progression and for local and systemic side effects.
What is the preferred first-line therapy?
topical prostaglandin analogs
Latanoprost
Travoprost
Bimatoprost
List alternative options.
Topical beta blockers alone and/or alpha-2 agonists [6]
Beta blockers
Timolol
Betaxolol
Alpha-2 agonists
Brimonidine
Apraclonidine: generally used perioperatively in patients with refractory glaucoma [5]
Topical carbonic anhydrase inhibitors
Brinzolamide
Dorzolamide
Refractory glaucoma: oral carbonic anhydrase inhibitors
Acetazolamide
Methazolamide
Describe the laster trabeculoplasty as an interventional therapy which lowers the IOP by fascillitating drainage of aqueous humor.
Indications
An alternative first-line treatment for patients with advanced disease at presentation
Glaucoma refractory to pharmacotherapy
Patients nonadherent or intolerant to pharmacotherapy
Procedure: use of a laser to thermally ablate the trabecular meshwork cells and improve aqueous outflow
Alternative: selective laser trabeculoplasty
Pigmented cells of the trabecular meshwork are selectively targeted for thermal ablation.
Has a better safety profile than laser trabeculoplasty and may soon become the preferred first-line therapy for treatment-naive open-angle glaucoma
List other interventions.
Surgical trabeculectomy
Indications: the same as those for laser trabeculoplasty
Procedure: involves the creation of a tunnel (through excision of trabecular meshwork) from the anterior chamber to the subconjunctival space under a thin scleral flap
Tube shunt surgery
Indication: glaucoma refractory to trabeculectomy
Procedure: A small silicone tube is inserted into the anterior chamber of the eye through which aqueous humor is drained into a valved chamber that is placed on the sclera underneath the upper eyelid. [10]
Procedures that lower IOP by decreasing aqueous humor production
Cyclodestructive surgery
Indication: glaucoma refractory to other treatment options
Procedure: laser or cryosurgical destruction of the ciliary body
Describe the prevention.
General screening for glaucoma is not considered cost-effective but is currently recommended in the following patient groups:
Personal history of diabetes mellitus
Family history of glaucoma
African Americans > 50 years of age
Hispanic Americans > 65 years of age
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