Acute angle-closure glaucoma

Background

Pathophysiology

  • Obstructed aqueous outflow tract ==> aqueous humor builds ==> increased intraocular pressure (IOP) ==> optic nerve damage ==> vision loss
  • Increased posterior chamber pressure causes iris to bulge forward (iris bombé) ==> further obstruction of outflow tract ==> further increase IOP
  • Acute attack is usually precipitated by pupillary dilation

Definition: 3 signs + 2 symptoms

  • At least 3 of these signs
    • IOP >21 mm Hg
    • Conjunctival injection
    • Corneal epithelial edema
    • Mid-dilated nonreactive pupil
    • Shallow anterior chamber with occlusion
  • At least 2 of these symptoms
    • Ocular pain
    • Nausea/vomiting
    • History of intermittent blurring of vision with halos

Clinical Features

  1. Abrupt onset of severe pain in affected eye
  2. Blurred vision
  3. Frontal or supraorbital headache
  4. N/V

Diagnosis

  1. Fixed, midposition pupil
  2. Hazy cornea
  3. Conjunctival injection (most prominent at limbus)
  4. Rock-hard globe
    1. IOP >20

Treatment

  1. Emergent ophtho consult
  2. Block aqueous humor production
    1. Timolol 0.5%, one drop AND
    2. Apraclonidine 1%, one drop AND
    3. Acetazolamide 500mg IV or PO
  3. Reduce volume of aqueous humor
    1. Mannitol 1–2gm/kg IV
    2. Give if no contraindications
  4. Facilitate outflow of aqueous humor
    1. Only effective once IOP <40
    2. Pilocarpine 1%–2%, one drop q15min x2 doses; then QID
  5. Recheck IOP hourly

See Also

Source

Tintinalli