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Prevalence and determinants of glaucoma : an epidemiologic approach (The Rotterdam Study)
- Publication date
- 19 April 1995
- Publisher
- Glaucoma is an eye disease characterized by damage to the optic nerve
head and related visual field defects, often accompanied by elevated
intraocular pressure. Glaucoma is an important cause of blindness, particularly
in the elderly. One may divide glaucoma in primary glaucoma without known
preceding cause, and secundary glaucoma. Primary glaucoma may be
genetically determined. The term secundary glaucoma refers to glaucoma
caused by some known antecedent or concomitant ocular disease.
Furthermore, primary glaucoma can be classified on anatomic basis into four
major divisions: open-angle glaucoma, angle closure glaucoma, mixed
glaucoma and congenital glaucoma. Primary open-angle is the most frequent
type of glaucoma, but its pathogenesis is not well understood.
In former times, the presence of an elevated intraocular pressure was
considered necessary and sufficient to make a diagnosis of glaucoma.
Nowadays solitary elevated intraocular pressure is called ocular hypertension
and for the diagnosis primary open-angle glaucoma the emphasis lies on
glaucomatous visual field defects even without elevated intraocular pressures.
It is unknown whether the sensitivity of the eye for a certain level of intraocular
pressure is decisive for the development of glaucomatous visual field defects,
and whether glaucoma with normal intraocular pressures is a different disease
entity from glaucoma with elevated intraocular pressures. Studies on risk factors
for primary open-angle glaucoma, with and without elevated intraocular
pressures, have been inconclusive.
This thesis focuses on epidemiologic studies on primary open-angle
glaucoma. The main part is devoted to the relation of putative risk factors with
primary open-angle glaucoma and intraocular pressure whereby a distinction
was made between glaucoma with elevated and normal intraocular pressures,
respectively.
In chapter 2 the current epidemiologic knowledge on primary open-angle
glaucoma has been reviewed. The following four chapters are based on the
Rotterdam Study, a population-based study of subjects aged 55 years and over.
Chapter 3 deals with the distribution of primary open-angle glaucoma and
relating characteristics in the Rotterdam Study. In chapter 4,5 and 6 putative risk
factors, including diabetes mellitus and systemic blood pressure, are discussed in
relation to primary open-angle glaucoma, intraocular pressure and optic disc
parameters. Chapter 7 deals with a reproducibility study of intraocular pressure
measurement. In chapter 8, some methodological considerations are given in
relation to the previous studies, with a review of the results of these studies and
some suggestions for further research.