glaucoma

I am interested in eye pressure research

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 09/30/2009 - 8:00am

Hi. I am interested in self-tonometry. My interest in self-tonometry is derived from my understanding of variations in biometric measurements, from as simple as basic body temperature readings to as complex as using electromyography to study the cooperative activity of muscles in making speech sounds, my doctoral research area many years ago.

Vitamin help for glaucoma and elevated eye pressure

Submitted by Agnes on Tue, 09/29/2009 - 5:19pm

Glaucoma is an eyesight ailment characterized by an increase of pressure of the fluid within the eyeball.  This increased pressure causes abnormal changes in the optic nerve and defects in the field of vision.

Travatan Z makes my vision cloudy

Submitted by 3287nest on Mon, 09/14/2009 - 9:27pm

Travatan Z makes my vision so cloudy that I can hardly see.   Cloudy is not really the word for it:  it's more like the kind of vision you'd get from a combination of cataracts and a migraine headache.. What experience have others had with it?

JudyPat

What would you do?

Submitted by belann on Sun, 09/13/2009 - 5:35pm

I have been reading the FitEyes posts for a long time now—hoping that I could get some ideas of how to preserve my vision in my only good eye.  Here is a little of my history.  I was diagnosed with glaucoma in 1989.  I can’t even remember what the pressures were at that time because I had no frame of reference.   All I know is that about four years later I had ALT laser to both eyes, and the doctor was gratified that he was able to get the pressure down to 18.  It didn’t last, but it was an initial victory.  Other than the short time after the laser, my pressures ran around 30 in both eyes.

Turmeric offers effective neurprotection - may be important in glaucoma to prevent optic nerve damage

Submitted by dave on Sun, 09/13/2009 - 11:23am

Regular use of traditional dietary spices such as turmeric in one's cooking may be important for glaucoma patients. The use of complete spices (e.g., turmeric rather than curcumin, which is an isolated fraction of turmeric) is important as well as the use of multiple complimentary spices according to long-established wisdom such as found in Ayurveda. Still, the research backing up anti-oxidant properties of turmeric is a useful read.

Is there a specialist that will allow me to self monitor my eye pressure?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/12/2009 - 9:41am

glaucoma specialist Hi,

I emailed you awhile ago about self-tonometry and am again interested after reading these messages here on FitEyes.com.

I have mixed gluacoma: some optic nerve cupping on both eyes. My doctor keeps recommending surgery in my left eye, but I do not want to go with that option yet.

Is there a specialist you know of in [my city] that will allow me to self monitor my eye pressure?

Self-tonometry in glaucoma management--past, present and future

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/01/2009 - 9:00pm

Glaucoma is the leading cause of irreversible blindness in the world. Diagnosis and management of glaucoma is significantly associated with intraocular pressure, but contemporary office-based measurements are not sufficient to discover diurnal changes and spikes, nor do they demonstrate the effect of medication and compliance. Patient-directed self-tonometry can be taken throughout the day and is therefore the subject of much discussion and research. In this article we review the history of self-tonometry devices and present technologies for the future.
   
Surv Ophthalmol. 2009 Jul-Aug;54(4):450-62.
    .
Liang SY, Lee GA, Shields D.
City Eye Centre, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Sylentis Aims to Begin Phase I Study of Glaucoma Drug in September

Submitted by dave on Sun, 08/30/2009 - 12:20pm

By Doug Macron

Spanish RNAi drug shop Sylentis expects to dose the first patient in a phase I study of its glaucoma-associated ocular hypertension drug SYL040012 in Spain around the end of September, a company official confirmed to RNAi News this week.

The disclosure comes about a month after the company announced that it had received clearance from Spanish regulators to begin the trial, in line with its previously disclosed guidance (see RNAi News, 2/19/2009).

Filed Under (tags):

Gingko Biloba shown to protect optic nerve cells from injury

Submitted by dave on Thu, 08/27/2009 - 10:05am

Oral consumption of Ginkgo biloba led to a higher survival rate of optic nerve cells (retinal ganglion cells). The effect was dosage-dependent - the higher concentrations of Ginkgo resulted in higher optic nerve cell survival rates. The dosages of Ginkgo were comparable to those an average person could safely consume.

Dosage dependence of the effect of Ginkgo biloba on the rat retinal ganglion cell survival after optic nerve crush - Abstract 

Relationship of Incident Glaucoma versus Physical Activity and Fitness in Male Runners

Submitted by dave on Mon, 08/17/2009 - 1:47pm

runningPurpose: To assess the dose-response relationship of vigorous physical activity (running distance, km·d-1) or cardiorespiratory fitness (meters-per-second pace during a 10-km footrace) to the risk for incident glaucoma.

Conclusions: These data provide preliminary evidence that vigorous physical activity may reduce glaucoma risk, which, in the absence of medical record validation, could represent ocular hypertension in addition to frank glaucoma. Additional follow-up with validation is needed to identify the type of glaucoma affected.

See full text article attached.

 

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