Acute angle-closure glaucoma: Difference between revisions
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== | ==Background== | ||
*IOP | [[File:Eye angle anatomy.png|thumb|Eye angle anatomy.]] | ||
* | [[File:Acute angle closure mechanism.png|thumb|Mechanism of acute angle closure.]] | ||
*shallow anterior | *Sudden increase in [[intraocular pressure]] (IOP) due to obstruction of aqueous humor outflow through the trabecular meshwork | ||
*'''Ophthalmologic emergency''' — permanent vision loss can occur within hours | |||
*Normal IOP: 10-21 mmHg; in acute attack: typically 40-80 mmHg | |||
*Pathophysiology: | |||
**Pupillary dilation → peripheral iris contacts trabecular meshwork → blocks aqueous outflow | |||
**Increased posterior chamber pressure → iris bows forward (iris bombe) → further obstruction | |||
*Risk factors: | |||
**Hyperopia (farsightedness — smaller anterior chamber) | |||
**Asian and Inuit descent (anatomically shallow anterior chambers) | |||
**Female sex, age >40 | |||
**Family history | |||
*Precipitants: dim lighting, medications causing mydriasis (anticholinergics, sympathomimetics, topiramate), emotional stress | |||
== | ==Clinical Features== | ||
[[File:Ciliary flush acute angle closure.jpg|thumb|Ciliary/circumcorneal flush and hazy cornea characteristic of acute angle closure glaucoma.]] | |||
[[File:Acute angle closure pupil.jpg|thumb|Right eye with mid-sized, fixed pupil and ciliary flush.]] | |||
*Sudden onset, severe unilateral eye pain | |||
*Blurred vision with "halos" around lights (corneal edema) | |||
*Frontal or supraorbital headache | |||
*Nausea and vomiting (may be prominent → misdiagnosed as GI illness) | |||
*Fixed, mid-dilated pupil (oval or irregular) | |||
*Hazy, edematous cornea (steamy appearance) | |||
*Ciliary flush (conjunctival injection most prominent at limbus) | |||
*Rock-hard globe on palpation (elevated IOP) | |||
*Decreased visual acuity | |||
== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
*[[Acute anterior uveitis/iritis]] (photophobia, small pupil, no corneal haze) | |||
*[[Conjunctivitis]] (no visual changes, normal IOP) | |||
*[[Corneal abrasion]] / [[corneal ulcer]] | |||
*[[Endophthalmitis]] | |||
*[[Migraine]] / [[cluster headache]] | |||
*[[Orbital cellulitis]] | |||
{{Unilateral red eye DDX}} | |||
==Evaluation== | |||
*IOP measurement (Tono-Pen or Goldmann): | |||
**IOP >21 mmHg (typically >40 mmHg in acute attack) | |||
*Slit lamp exam: | |||
**Shallow anterior chamber | |||
**Corneal edema | |||
**Cell and flare (inflammatory reaction) | |||
**Mid-dilated, fixed pupil | |||
[[Category: | ===Diagnostic Criteria: 3 Signs + 2 Symptoms=== | ||
*At least 3 signs: IOP >21 mmHg, conjunctival injection, corneal epithelial edema, mid-dilated nonreactive pupil, shallow anterior chamber | |||
*At least 2 symptoms: ocular pain, nausea/vomiting, history of intermittent blurring with halos | |||
==Management== | |||
*Goal: rapidly lower IOP to prepare for definitive laser iridotomy<ref>Primary Angle Closure Preferred Practice Pattern. American Academy of Ophthalmology. 2016.</ref> | |||
*Emergent ophthalmology consult | |||
*Recheck IOP at least hourly | |||
*Position: elevate head of bed, keep room well-lit (promotes miosis) | |||
*Start simultaneously with topical beta-blocker, alpha-2 agonist, and systemic carbonic anhydrase inhibitor | |||
===Decrease Aqueous Humor Production=== | |||
*Timolol 0.5%: 1 drop in affected eye; repeat in 1 hour if needed | |||
**Contraindicated in severe asthma/COPD, bradycardia, heart block | |||
*Acetazolamide 500 mg IV or PO (PO preferred unless nauseated) | |||
**Contraindicated in '''sickle cell disease''' (promotes sickling in acidic environment) | |||
**Substitute methazolamide 100 mg if renal failure | |||
*Dorzolamide 2%: topical carbonic anhydrase inhibitor — 1 drop affected eye | |||
===Alpha-2 Agonist=== | |||
*Brimonidine 0.2% OR apraclonidine 1%: 1 drop affected eye | |||
**Reduces aqueous production and increases trabecular outflow | |||
===Facilitate Aqueous Outflow=== | |||
*Pilocarpine 1-2%: 1 drop affected eye every 15 min x 2-4 doses, then q4-6h | |||
**Parasympathomimetic → miosis → pulls iris away from trabecular meshwork | |||
**'''Likely ineffective until IOP drops below 40-50 mmHg''' (ischemic sphincter muscle) — give immediately anyway | |||
**'''Do NOT use pilocarpine >4%''' (causes forward iris-lens displacement) | |||
**Note: miosis makes fundoscopic exam more difficult for ophthalmologist | |||
===Reduce Vitreous Volume (Refractory Cases)=== | |||
*Mannitol 1-2 g/kg IV over 45 minutes (most common hyperosmotic agent) | |||
**Contraindicated in renal failure; can cause hypotension | |||
*50% glycerin or 45% isosorbide 1.5 mL/kg PO (rarely used) | |||
===Topical Steroids=== | |||
*Prednisolone acetate 1%: 1 drop q15-30min x 4, then q1h | |||
**Not during acute attack; consider '''after IOP controlled''' to reduce inflammation<ref>Guluma K, Lee JE. Ophthalmology. In: ''Rosen's Emergency Medicine''. 9th ed. Elsevier; 2018.</ref> | |||
==Disposition== | |||
*Admit for definitive treatment with laser peripheral iridotomy (definitive cure) | |||
*Prophylactic iridotomy of the fellow (unaffected) eye is standard practice | |||
*Ophthalmology follow-up within 24 hours | |||
==See Also== | |||
*[[Eye emergencies]] | |||
*[[Open-angle glaucoma]] | |||
*[[Tono-Pen use]] | |||
*[[Anterior uveitis]] | |||
==References== | |||
<references/> | |||
*Prum BE Jr, et al. Primary angle closure — Preferred Practice Pattern. ''Ophthalmology''. 2016;123(1):P1-P40. PMID 26581557 | |||
*Ah-Kee EY, et al. A review of drug-induced acute angle closure glaucoma. ''J Ophthalmol''. 2015;2015:737053. PMID 25861463 | |||
*Sng CC, Ang M, Barton K. Acute angle closure glaucoma. In: ''Ophthalmology''. 5th ed. Elsevier; 2019. | |||
[[Category:Ophthalmology]] | |||
Latest revision as of 09:35, 22 March 2026
Background
File:Eye angle anatomy.png
Eye angle anatomy.
File:Acute angle closure mechanism.png
Mechanism of acute angle closure.
- Sudden increase in intraocular pressure (IOP) due to obstruction of aqueous humor outflow through the trabecular meshwork
- Ophthalmologic emergency — permanent vision loss can occur within hours
- Normal IOP: 10-21 mmHg; in acute attack: typically 40-80 mmHg
- Pathophysiology:
- Pupillary dilation → peripheral iris contacts trabecular meshwork → blocks aqueous outflow
- Increased posterior chamber pressure → iris bows forward (iris bombe) → further obstruction
- Risk factors:
- Hyperopia (farsightedness — smaller anterior chamber)
- Asian and Inuit descent (anatomically shallow anterior chambers)
- Female sex, age >40
- Family history
- Precipitants: dim lighting, medications causing mydriasis (anticholinergics, sympathomimetics, topiramate), emotional stress
Clinical Features
File:Ciliary flush acute angle closure.jpg
Ciliary/circumcorneal flush and hazy cornea characteristic of acute angle closure glaucoma.
File:Acute angle closure pupil.jpg
Right eye with mid-sized, fixed pupil and ciliary flush.
- Sudden onset, severe unilateral eye pain
- Blurred vision with "halos" around lights (corneal edema)
- Frontal or supraorbital headache
- Nausea and vomiting (may be prominent → misdiagnosed as GI illness)
- Fixed, mid-dilated pupil (oval or irregular)
- Hazy, edematous cornea (steamy appearance)
- Ciliary flush (conjunctival injection most prominent at limbus)
- Rock-hard globe on palpation (elevated IOP)
- Decreased visual acuity
Differential Diagnosis
- Acute anterior uveitis/iritis (photophobia, small pupil, no corneal haze)
- Conjunctivitis (no visual changes, normal IOP)
- Corneal abrasion / corneal ulcer
- Endophthalmitis
- Migraine / cluster headache
- Orbital cellulitis
Unilateral red eye
- Nontraumatic
- Acute angle-closure glaucoma^
- Anterior uveitis
- Conjunctivitis
- Corneal erosion
- Corneal ulcer^
- Endophthalmitis^
- Episcleritis
- Herpes zoster ophthalmicus
- Inflamed pinguecula
- Inflamed pterygium
- Keratoconjunctivitis
- Keratoconus
- Nontraumatic iritis
- Scleritis^
- Subconjunctival hemorrhage
- Orbital trauma
- Caustic keratoconjunctivitis^^
- Corneal abrasion, Corneal laceration
- Conjunctival hemorrhage
- Conjunctival laceration
- Globe rupture^
- Hemorrhagic chemosis
- Lens dislocation
- Ocular foreign body
- Posterior vitreous detachment
- Retinal detachment
- Retrobulbar hemorrhage
- Traumatic hyphema
- Traumatic iritis
- Traumatic mydriasis
- Traumatic optic neuropathy
- Vitreous detachment
- Vitreous hemorrhage
- Ultraviolet keratitis
^Emergent diagnoses
^^Critical diagnoses
Evaluation
- IOP measurement (Tono-Pen or Goldmann):
- IOP >21 mmHg (typically >40 mmHg in acute attack)
- Slit lamp exam:
- Shallow anterior chamber
- Corneal edema
- Cell and flare (inflammatory reaction)
- Mid-dilated, fixed pupil
Diagnostic Criteria: 3 Signs + 2 Symptoms
- At least 3 signs: IOP >21 mmHg, conjunctival injection, corneal epithelial edema, mid-dilated nonreactive pupil, shallow anterior chamber
- At least 2 symptoms: ocular pain, nausea/vomiting, history of intermittent blurring with halos
Management
- Goal: rapidly lower IOP to prepare for definitive laser iridotomy[1]
- Emergent ophthalmology consult
- Recheck IOP at least hourly
- Position: elevate head of bed, keep room well-lit (promotes miosis)
- Start simultaneously with topical beta-blocker, alpha-2 agonist, and systemic carbonic anhydrase inhibitor
Decrease Aqueous Humor Production
- Timolol 0.5%: 1 drop in affected eye; repeat in 1 hour if needed
- Contraindicated in severe asthma/COPD, bradycardia, heart block
- Acetazolamide 500 mg IV or PO (PO preferred unless nauseated)
- Contraindicated in sickle cell disease (promotes sickling in acidic environment)
- Substitute methazolamide 100 mg if renal failure
- Dorzolamide 2%: topical carbonic anhydrase inhibitor — 1 drop affected eye
Alpha-2 Agonist
- Brimonidine 0.2% OR apraclonidine 1%: 1 drop affected eye
- Reduces aqueous production and increases trabecular outflow
Facilitate Aqueous Outflow
- Pilocarpine 1-2%: 1 drop affected eye every 15 min x 2-4 doses, then q4-6h
- Parasympathomimetic → miosis → pulls iris away from trabecular meshwork
- Likely ineffective until IOP drops below 40-50 mmHg (ischemic sphincter muscle) — give immediately anyway
- Do NOT use pilocarpine >4% (causes forward iris-lens displacement)
- Note: miosis makes fundoscopic exam more difficult for ophthalmologist
Reduce Vitreous Volume (Refractory Cases)
- Mannitol 1-2 g/kg IV over 45 minutes (most common hyperosmotic agent)
- Contraindicated in renal failure; can cause hypotension
- 50% glycerin or 45% isosorbide 1.5 mL/kg PO (rarely used)
Topical Steroids
- Prednisolone acetate 1%: 1 drop q15-30min x 4, then q1h
- Not during acute attack; consider after IOP controlled to reduce inflammation[2]
Disposition
- Admit for definitive treatment with laser peripheral iridotomy (definitive cure)
- Prophylactic iridotomy of the fellow (unaffected) eye is standard practice
- Ophthalmology follow-up within 24 hours
See Also
References
- Prum BE Jr, et al. Primary angle closure — Preferred Practice Pattern. Ophthalmology. 2016;123(1):P1-P40. PMID 26581557
- Ah-Kee EY, et al. A review of drug-induced acute angle closure glaucoma. J Ophthalmol. 2015;2015:737053. PMID 25861463
- Sng CC, Ang M, Barton K. Acute angle closure glaucoma. In: Ophthalmology. 5th ed. Elsevier; 2019.
