Angle Closure Glaucoma
Angle Closure Glaucoma
Angle Closure Glaucoma
Acute
Subacute (intermittent)
Chronic
2. Primary angle closure without pupil block
Plateau iris syndrome
3. Secondary angle closure with pupil block
4. Secondary angle closure without pupil block
1. Primary Angle Closure with Pupil Block: Mechanism
Irido-lenticular apposition
Mid dilated state causes most problems
Absent egress of aqueous to anterior chamber
Pressure buildup
Iris bomb: bowing forward of iris due to posterior pressure buildup.
Irido-corneal apposition
Closure of angle- Peripheral anterior synechiae (PAS) formation
Permanent synechial closure if contact remains too long
Alleviated by altering the irido-lenticular apposition (pupil block). Can be done with either
dilation or miosis: Miosis has long been the standard to pull the iris out of the angle, but
anything that alleviates the irido-lenticular apposition should benefit.
Very few doctors will dilate a patient in angle closure
IOP rise (40-70 mm hg or higher)
Possible central retinal artery or vein closure due to elevated IOP
NFL damage can occur within 24 hrs- tissue cannot adapt to sudden pressure rise
Prevalence: 0.09% - higher in Asian and Eskimo population
Anatomic features:
Small corneal diameter
Small axial length
Axial length 5% shorter
Moderate hyperopia
Thick lens
7% thicker
Greater propensity for lens to move forward
Shallow anterior chamber
Clinical Pearl: Do not mistake angle closure glaucoma for uveitic glaucoma and vice-versa!
Acute angle closure glaucoma can appear superficially similar to uveitic glaucoma. In fact,
uveitis can cause a secondary angle closure. However, in acute uveitic glaucoma, there will
be a very active anterior chamber reaction that will be absent in acute angle closure.
Angle Closure Glaucoma: Patient Profile
White > Black
Asian: ACG > POAG
Females > males
Older > younger
Hyperopes > myopes
Eskimo population has the highest incidence of angle closure
Angle closure is uncommon in patients of African descent
Clinical Pearl: The typical profile of an angle closure glaucoma patient is an older,
hyperopic female. Asian descent increases the risk greatly.
Acute Primary Angle Closure Glaucoma:
Entire angle closed (virtually)
Vision loss in days
NFL damage by 48 hours
Profound signs and symptoms
Red eye
Photophobic
Halos- corneal edema
Blurred vision
Nausea/emesis
Elevated IOP
IOP 45 mm Hg (or greater) common
Mid-dilated pupil
Mild anterior chamber reaction
Cloudy, corneal edema
Vision loss can occur from glaucomatous atrophy, ischemic neuropathy, or vascular
occlusion. Retinal NFL damage has been documented to occur beyond 48 hours of angle
closure attack
May result in chronic IOP elevation after breaking attack and alleviating angle closure due to
TM damage.
Acute Primary Angle Closure Glaucoma: Management
Relieve corneal edema-glycerin topically
Corneal indentation: Force aqueous into the angle, thus draining it and forcing the angle open.
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Clinical Pearl: Most doctors believe that you should be pouring pilocarpine into eyes
undergoing angle closure. In reality, all that you are likely to do is give your patient
diarrhea.
Brain Teaser: What do you do if the cornea is too cloudy to visualize the angle with
gonioscopy and won't clear with glycerin? What do you do?
Clinical Pearl: When managing patients in acute primary angle closure, remember that
your goal is not to reduce the IOP, but to change the angle anatomy. Pressure reduction is
merely part of the process.
Primary Angle Closure Glaucoma: Subacute (Intermittent)
Recurrent attacks
Dim lighting leads to pupil dilation and block
Opens during sleep as pupil mioses- Subsides spontaneously
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Lesser symptoms
Partial angle closure
PAS, particularly superiorly
Cataract and iris atrophy
Episodic blurred vision
Halos
Incorrectly called narrow angle glaucoma
Angle chronically narrow
Often discovered on routine exam
IOP often normal in office- misdiagnosed as NTG
ONH cupping and field loss are often first indication of this disease
Hydrochlorothiazide
Promethazine
Bromocriptine
Penicillamine
Isotretinoin
Viagra
Trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole
Spironolactone
Tetracycline
Quinine
Aspirin
PAS indicates that laser procedures are likely to be ineffective and trabeculectomy may be
needed
Phacolytic
Uveitic
Phacomorphic
Aphakia
Vitreous prolapse
Pseudophakia
Reverse pupil block with AC lens
Subluxated lens
chamber. Instead, the aqueous is diverted into the vitreous cavity. This increases the
volume inside the vitreous cavity. An abnormally impermeable anterior hyaloid face may
play a role by preventing aqueous from diffusing through the vitreous into the anterior
chamber and thusly causes an increase in the volume of the vitreous. This expansion of
the vitreous secondarily pushes the lens and iris towards the cornea with subsequent
shallowing of the anterior chamber and closure of the angles.
Classic sign of malignant glaucoma development: anterior chamber shallowing with
IOP slowly rising following trabeculectomy
Unresponsive to conventional medical and surgical glaucoma therapies
Best managed with atropine 1% BID, topical steroids, aqueous suppressants, and
possibly acetazolamide 1 gm PO QD (will dehydrate and shrink vitreous). Eventually,
everything but atropine is tapered (atropine is continued indefinitely).
Surgical options:
Vitrectomy and lensectomy
Debulks the vitreous
Chandlers procedure- vitreous aspiration with gas reformation of AC
Nd:YAG rupturing of the abnormally impermeable vitreous face so that aqueous can
escape
Clinical Pearl: Many cases of angle closure, such as aphakic (vitreous) pupil block, can be
best managed by dilating the patient.
Clinical Pearl: Knowing whether to dilate or miose an angle closure separates doctors from
technicians.
Clinical Pearl: After successful laser treatment for angle closure glaucoma, the IOP may still
be elevated. The cause typically is compromise to the angle structures (meshwork) from the
angle closure. Many doctors dont realize this and use the term, mixed mechanism
glaucoma to denote a case where the patient has been successfully treated with laser for
angle closure, yet still has elevated IOP. The doctor who uses the term, mixed mechanism
glaucoma is really saying, The pressure is high and I dont know why.
Primary Open Angle Glaucoma and Primary Angle Closure Glaucoma
Changing angle configuration- age
Gonio on a yearly basis on all POAG patients to determine if a conversion from open to
closed angle is occurring, especially if a previously well-controlled POAG patient begins to
show signs of progressing field loss.
Laser PI
Narrow angle glaucoma is an antiquated term and not appropriate. Do not use this term.
Better to speak in terms of chronic angle closure.
Primary Angle Closure Glaucoma: Prophylaxis
Laser PI
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Clinical Pearl: Gonioscopy is a static view of a dynamic process and a poor predictor of
which patients will undergo angle closure. Better provocative tests are needed to identify
those at risk for choroidal expansion and angle closure. Physiology and not merely
anatomy explains angle closure glaucoma.
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