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==Medical Therapy==
==Medical Therapy==
===Drugs===
Intraocular pressure can be lowered with medication, usually eye drops.  There are several different classes of medications to treat glaucoma with several different medications in each class.
Each of these medicines may have local and systemic side effects.  Adherence to medication protocol can be confusing and expensive; if side effects occur, the patient must be willing either to tolerate these, or to communicate with the treating physician to improve the drug regimen.
Poor compliance with medications and follow-up visits is a major reason for vision loss in glaucoma patients.  Patient education and communication must be ongoing to sustain successful treatment plans for this lifelong disease with no early symptoms.  Ophthalmologists have debated whether glaucoma eye drops should initially be started in both eyes or in just one eye (a binocular or monocular trial), but it appears either strategy is reasonable when properly interpreted. <ref name="Monocular Trial">Interpretation of uniocular and binocular trials of glaucoma medications: an observational case series,[http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2415/7/17/abstract]</ref>
The possible neuroprotective effects of various topical and systemic medications are also being investigated.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 05:03, 23 August 2012

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [3]

Overview

Although intraocular pressure is only one major risk factors of glaucoma, lowering it via pharmaceuticals or surgery is currently the mainstay of glaucoma treatment. In Europe, Japan, and Canada laser treatment is often the first line of therapy. In the U.S., adoption of early laser has lagged, even though prospective, multi-centered, peer-reviewed studies, since the early '90s, have shown laser to be at least as effective as topical medications in controlling intraocular pressure and preserving visual field. Some studies suggest that acupuncture can be very helpful in the treatment of Glaucoma. [1] [2]

Medical Therapy

Drugs

Intraocular pressure can be lowered with medication, usually eye drops. There are several different classes of medications to treat glaucoma with several different medications in each class.

Each of these medicines may have local and systemic side effects. Adherence to medication protocol can be confusing and expensive; if side effects occur, the patient must be willing either to tolerate these, or to communicate with the treating physician to improve the drug regimen.

Poor compliance with medications and follow-up visits is a major reason for vision loss in glaucoma patients. Patient education and communication must be ongoing to sustain successful treatment plans for this lifelong disease with no early symptoms. Ophthalmologists have debated whether glaucoma eye drops should initially be started in both eyes or in just one eye (a binocular or monocular trial), but it appears either strategy is reasonable when properly interpreted. [3]

The possible neuroprotective effects of various topical and systemic medications are also being investigated.

References

  1. Clinical application of acupuncture in ophthalmology. Dabov S; Goutoranov G; Ivanova R; Petkova N Acupunct Electrother Res 1985, 10 (1-2) p79-93
  2. New Peer Reviewed Study treating open angle glaucoma with acupuncture, [1]
  3. Interpretation of uniocular and binocular trials of glaucoma medications: an observational case series,[2]

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