• Dtsch Arztebl Int · Nov 2021

    Acute Closed-Angle Glaucoma-an Ophthalmological Emergency.

    • Simone Nüssle, Thomas Reinhard, and Jan Lübke.
    • Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2021 Nov 12; 118 (Forthcoming): 771780771-80.

    BackgroundAcute closed-angle glaucoma has an incidence of 2.2-4.1 cases per 100 000 persons per year in Europe. It is an ophthalmological emergency in which markedly elevated intraocular pressure can damage vision permanently. Because the acute symptoms are not always clearly referable to the eyes, patients often present to physicians who are not ophthalmologists.MethodsThis review is based on pertinent articles retrieved by a selective search in PubMed.ResultsThe diverse symptoms of acute closed-angle glaucoma include eye redness, worsening of vision and other visual disturbances, headache, and nausea. Acute closed-angle glaucoma has multiple causes. Not all predisposing factors have been definitively identified; above all, there are certain anatomical configurations of the eye that make it more likely to arise. The goals of treatment are to reduce the elevated intraocular pressure rapidly, which usually leads to marked symptom relief, as well as to eliminate the situation that led to closed-angle glaucoma. For proper treatment, the patient should be seen by an ophthalmologist without delay, on the day of symptom onset if possible.ConclusionPrimary prevention of acute closed-angle glaucoma is not always possible. Even physicians who are not ophthalmologists can diagnose markedly elevated intraocular pressure by palpation of the globe. Proper, specific treatment can help patients rapidly and lastingly.

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