A new study published in Investigative
Ophthalmology & Visual Science (IOVS) has found that chronic
(long term) hypertension increases a person's susceptibility to glaucoma. These
results suggest that doctors should consider a patient's blood pressure levels
in managing the potentially blinding eye disorder.
Glaucoma, the second leading cause of
blindness in the world, is a condition that occurs when too much pressure
builds up inside the eye. This excess pressure pushes back against blood trying
to enter the eye resulting in vision loss.
"Studies have shown that high
blood pressure is a risk factor for glaucoma. But the reasons for this were
never clear," said author Bang Bui, PhD, of the University of Melbourne,
Australia, Department of Optometry and Vision Sciences. In the IOVS study,
Chronic Hypertension Increases Susceptibility to Acute IOP Challenge in Rats,
Bang and his co-authors from the University of Melbourne and School of Medicine
at Deakin University, Australia, identify a reason for those observations.
Previously, it was thought that high
blood pressure could counteract the high eye pressure that leads to glaucoma.
This theory was supported by past research that had shown raising blood
pressure for a short period of time (one hour) offered some protection against
elevated eye pressure, as high blood pressure ensured that blood continued to
enter the eye.
However, data gathered from large
populations of glaucoma patients subsequently suggested that hypertension in
young patients protects against the disorder, but is a risk factor in older
patients.
One explanation of this phenomenon is
that any benefit from high blood pressure counteracting high eye pressure is
lost as damage to blood vessels -- a consequence of hypertension -- becomes
more prevalent.
The authors tested this hypothesis by
comparing the effect of acute (one hour) and chronic (four week) hypertension
in lab rats with elevated eye pressure.
"When we raised blood
pressure... for four weeks, we didn't get the same protection against eye
pressure elevation as in the [one hour] case," said Bui. "What this
means is that having high blood pressure for a longer time has compromised the
eye's capacity to cope with high eye pressure. It seems that hypertension might
damage the blood vessels in the eye so that they can't compensate for changes
in blood flow when eye pressure increases."
This new understanding of the consequences of high blood
pressure will help doctors treat patients with glaucoma. Instead of viewing
hypertension as beneficial in the fight against the disorder, Bui suggests it
should be identified as a risk factor. Further studies in this area might
better inform how to treat patients with hypertension who also develop
glaucoma.
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