Acute angle-closure glaucoma

Revision as of 19:33, 28 October 2011 by Jswartz (talk | contribs)

Diagnosis

  • Pathophysiology
    • Obstructed aqueous humor outflow leads to incr IOP -> optic neuropathy and vision loss
      • Posterior chamber pressure increases, causing iris to bulge forward (iris bombe)
        • This further decreases the angle and increases the IOP
  • Acute attack is usually precipitated by pupillary dilation
  • IOP >30, usually higher (no definitive cut-off)
  • deep conjunctival and episcleral injection in a circumlimbal fashion, ciliary flush, edematous "steamy" cornea, pupil mid-dilated and non-reactive
  • shallow anterior chamber

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
  4. Recheck IOP hourly
  5. Facilitate outflow of aqueous humor
    1. Only effective once IOP <40
    2. Pilocarpine 1%–2%, one drop q15min x2 doses; then QID

Source

Tintinalli