GlaucomaSigns and Care

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Assisting Hands Home Care

Posted on

Jul 27, 2021

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Florida - Southwest

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For more information on the author Assisting Hands Home Care Naples, CLICK HERE.


Knowledge is Power
As a caregiver to your loved one, it is important to learn as much as you can about Glaucoma, also called the silent thief of sight, so that you can possibly stave off its damaging effects. Being informed will help reduce anxiety and possibly alter the outcome of the diagnosis to be more positive.
Here is what is known about glaucoma, according to www.glaucoma.org:

Glaucoma is a group of conditions where the nerve connecting the eye to the brain is deteriorated or damaged, usually due to high eye pressure. The most common type of glaucoma is open-angle glaucoma. This type often has no symptoms other than slow vision loss. Angle-closure glaucoma is rare. This type is considered a medical emergency. The symptoms include eye pain accompanied by nausea and sudden visual disturbance.
Most types of glaucoma are hereditary
Glaucoma is the leading cause of blindness for people over the age of 60
Open-angle glaucoma does not present with symptoms
Some vision loss begins with peripheral or side vision. You may compensate for this unconsciously by turning your head to the side, and may not notice anything until significant vision is lost
An estimated 3 million Americans have glaucoma but only half of those know they have it
Glaucoma is a chronic disease and must be managed and monitored for life

Research tells us that everyone is at risk of glaucoma. The disease affects every age group with a higher concentration among Blacks, Asians, and Hispanics. It is also known that people who are severely near-sighted and diabetic are also among the high-risk group. But if caught early and properly managed, this disease may not cause blindness because treatment can slow the progression of the disease.
Treatment and Management
According to the Cleveland Clinic, its important to see your eye doctor immediately if you have eye pain, severe headaches or vision problems.
Glaucoma treatments include:
Eyedrops/Medication: Prescription eyedrops decrease fluids and increase drainage to alleviate eye pressure. There are many types of eyedrop medications that can be used for this condition. Because glaucoma is a lifelong condition, you may need to use daily eyedrops for life.
Laser treatment: Your eye doctor uses a laser (strong beam of light) to help improve fluid drainage from your eye. While the laser can complement the use of eye drops, it may not replace it completely. The results from laser treatments vary but can last up to five years. Some laser treatments can also be repeated.
Surgery: Surgery is another way to help reduce eye pressure. It is more invasive but can also achieve better eye pressure control faster than drops or laser. Surgery can help slow down vision loss, but it cant restore lost vision or cure glaucoma. There are many types of surgeries for glaucoma, and depending on the specific type and severity, your eye doctor may choose one over another.
Signs of glaucoma
Loss of peripheral or side vision is usually one of the first sign of glaucoma. If you or your loved one is experiencing this type of vision loss, be sure to contact an ophthalmologist as soon as possible. Other signs to be aware of include:

Seeing halos around lights: If you see rainbow-colored circles around lights or are unusually sensitive to light, it could be a sign of glaucoma.
Vision loss: Especially if it happens suddenly.

What you can do as your loved ones caregiver
A few suggestions that can help provide safety for your loved one with glaucoma:

Mark steps and slopes
Improve lighting
Remove clutter
Use large print on important items
Use technology such as smartphones, tablets, text-to-speech apps
Provide low-vision aides which are devices that aid people with poor vision. Examples include hand-held magnifiers, strong magnifying reading glasses, loupes, and small telescopes.)
Create a support team that can include friends and family to help with visits to the doctor.

According to Dr. Jithin Yohannan of the Wilmer Eye Institute at Johns Hopkins Medicine, there is hope because glaucoma is often a very manageable disease. The vast majority of patients will not go blind from glaucoma if they maintain good follow-up with their care team and follow their recommendations.
If you or a loved one are in need of compassionate and dependable care, be sure to click the link above to connect with Assisting Hands Home Care.






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