GlaucomaWhat Increases Your RiskFactors that increase your
risk for
glaucoma vary according to the different types of
glaucoma. Risk factors for
open-angle glaucoma (OAG) include: - High pressure in the eyes. Open-angle glaucoma is
often associated with higher-than-normal pressure in the eyes (intraocular pressure, or IOP). But not all people with
open-angle glaucoma have increased pressure inside the eye. Estimates vary, but
as many as 40% to 50% of people with glaucoma have normal IOP, and most people
with elevated pressures will never get glaucoma. 1, 2High
pressure in the eyes is the one treatable risk factor for open-angle
glaucoma. But raised pressure in the eyes alone is not enough to diagnose
glaucoma and does not always require treatment. If you have elevated pressure
in your eyes but you do not have glaucoma, you will still need to be followed
carefully by your doctor.
- Age. The risk for glaucoma increases rapidly after
age 40. People age 70 and older are about 4 to 7 times more likely to develop
glaucoma than people 40 to 50 years old.4
- Race. In the United States, blacks are 4 times
more likely than whites to have glaucoma.4
- Family history of glaucoma. Relatives of people
with open-angle glaucoma that is not caused by another condition (called
primary open-angle glaucoma) have about a 9 times greater risk of developing
glaucoma.5 Changes within the eye (enlarged cup-disc
ratio)—not increased pressure in the eye—may be the first sign of glaucoma in
these cases.
- Prior loss of vision in one eye from glaucoma. Damage in one eye from glaucoma is associated with a higher risk
of future damage in the other eye. If glaucoma is not treated, the risk that
damage will occur in the other eye within 5 years is about 29%.5
- Diabetes. People with diabetes tend to have higher
pressure in their eyes than those without the disease. People with diabetes are
also at risk for a type of secondary glaucoma where new blood vessels grow into
and block the drainage angle of the eye (trabecular
meshwork).
Risk factors for developing
closed-angle glaucoma include: - Race. People from East Asia or with East Asian
ancestry, as well as Canadian, Alaskan, and Greenland Inuit peoples, are more
likely than other people to develop closed-angle glaucoma.3
- Age. People over age 40 are at increased risk for
closed-angle glaucoma.
- Sex. Older women are more likely than older men to
develop closed-angle glaucoma.
- Birth defects. People who are born with narrow
drainage angles in their eyes may develop closed-angle
glaucoma if their pupils stay wide open (dilated). How much the pupil is
dilated and how long it stays dilated, causing an attack of closed-angle
glaucoma, varies from person to person.
- Farsightedness. People who are farsighted are more
likely to develop this condition because their eyes are smaller and the
drainage angles of the eyes tend to be narrower, allowing them to become
blocked more easily.
- Family history. People with a family history of
closed-angle glaucoma are more likely to develop the condition.
- Having closed-angle glaucoma in one eye. Having
closed-angle glaucoma in one eye increases the risk of developing the condition
in the other eye. About half of the people who have had acute closed-angle
glaucoma in one eye develop closed-angle glaucoma in the second eye within 5
years.3
Risk factors for developing
congenital glaucoma include: - Infection in the mother during pregnancy. Babies
born to mothers who have certain viral infections such as
rubella during pregnancy are at a higher risk for
congenital glaucoma.
- Family history. About 10% of infants with
congenital glaucoma inherit the condition.6
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