Traumatic Glaucoma in both eyes?!


Question: Traumatic Glaucoma in both eyes!?
My brother is 17 and got hit in the eye with a birdie from badminton!. There was blood in his iris and he looked awful for about two weeks!. He went back to the doctor for them to make sure he was recovering fine and they discovered he had glaucoma!. To me, and my little knowledge of the condition, the logical explanation is that the glaucoma was caused by the eye injury!. But since the doctors found it in both eyes they're saying it was a pre-existing condition!. My brother has had 20-20 vision his entire life and no one in our family has any history of any kind of glaucoma!. So I find it hard to believe its a genetic thing in this case!.

My question is this!. Is it possible for glaucoma caused by trauma to spread to the second eye!? And if it is something he's always had, would he show signs of it at just 17!? And also!.!. how long would it take him to start losing his vision!?Www@Answer-Health@Com


Answers:
Traumatic glaucoma would only occur in the eye that had the trauma, therefore, it is probably a preexisting condition!. My question is, how did the Ophthalmologist diagnose it!? Was it high pressure, visual field loss, optic nerve shape!? If it was only high pressure, further testing should be done prior to starting a 17 yr old on drops for the rest of his life!. If your brother did not see an Ophthalmologist, have him see one to get a real diagnosis!. Optometrists are good at prescribing glasses/contacts, but not quite as good at diagnosing medical conditions!. For medical conditions, see a medical eye doctor!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

The two main types of glaucoma are primary open angle glaucoma (POAG), and angle closure glaucoma!. These are marked by an increase of intraocular pressure (IOP), or pressure inside the eye!. When optic nerve damage has occurred despite a normal IOP, this is called normal tension glaucoma!. Secondary glaucoma refers to any case in which another disease causes or contributes to increased eye pressure, resulting in optic nerve damage and vision loss!.

http://www!.glaucoma!.org/learn/types!.php

Secondary glaucoma: Symptoms of chronic glaucoma following an eye injury could indicate secondary glaucoma, which also may develop with presence of infection, inflammation, a tumor or an enlarged cataract!.

http://www!.allaboutvision!.com/conditions!.!.!.

Angle-closure glaucoma, also called closed-angle glaucoma, occurs when the iris bulges forward to narrow or block the drainage angle formed by the cornea and the iris!. As a result, aqueous fluid can no longer access the trabecular meshwork at the angle, so the eye pressure increases abruptly!. Angle-closure glaucoma usually occurs suddenly (acute angle-closure glaucoma), but it can also occur gradually (chronic angle-closure glaucoma!.)

Many people who develop closed-angle glaucoma have an abnormally narrow drainage angle to begin with!. This narrow angle may never cause any problems, so it may go undetected for life!.

If you have a narrow drainage angle, sudden dilation of your pupils may trigger acute angle-closure glaucoma!. Pupils become dilated in response to darkness, dim light, stress, excitement and certain medications!. These medications include antihistamines, such as desloratadine (Clarinex) and cetirizine (Zyrtec); tricyclic antidepressants, such as doxepin (Sinequan) and protriptyline (Vivactil); and eyedrops used to dilate your pupils for a thorough eye exam!.

http://www!.allaboutvision!.com/conditions!.!.!.

Hope that helps, the links are great resources for glaucoma informationWww@Answer-Health@Com

do you know what glaucoma is!?
its when the pressure in your eye is highter than normal and your fluid in your eye doesn't drain as well as it should!.

i'm sure it was pre-exsisting!.

people can have glaucoma and not have any symptoms of it!.
but if he did have symptoms they would be:
-sensitive to light
-pain in eyes
-headaches
-watery eyes
-the feeling of your eye being huge!.

if he is getting treatment (such as eye drops) he won't go blind!.
he won't go blind over time either!. its not a degenerative condition!. as long as his pressure is under control he will be like any other person!.
the only reason he would go blind is if the pressure in his eyes got too high!.Www@Answer-Health@Com





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