| Literature DB >> 26483611 |
Christopher T Leffler1, Stephen G Schwartz2, Francesca M Giliberti1, Matthew T Young1, Dennis Bermudez2.
Abstract
Glaucoma involves a characteristic optic neuropathy, often with elevated intraocular pressure. Before 1850, poor vision with a normal eye appearance, as occurs in primary open-angle glaucoma, was termed amaurosis, gutta serena, or black cataract. Few observers noted palpable hardness of the eye in amaurosis. On the other hand, angle-closure glaucoma can produce a green or gray pupil, and therefore was called, variously, glaucoma (derived from the Greek for glaucous, a nonspecific term connoting blue, green, or light gray) and viriditate oculi. Angle closure, with palpable hardness of the eye, mydriasis, and anterior prominence of the lens, was described in greater detail in the 18th and 19th centuries. The introduction of the ophthalmoscope in 1850 permitted the visualization of the excavated optic neuropathy in eyes with a normal or with a dilated greenish-gray pupil. Physicians developed a better appreciation of the role of intraocular pressure in both conditions, which became subsumed under the rubric "glaucoma".Entities:
Keywords: angle-closure glaucoma; glaucoma; history of ophthalmology; open-angle glaucoma
Year: 2015 PMID: 26483611 PMCID: PMC4601337 DOI: 10.4137/OED.S32004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ophthalmol Eye Dis ISSN: 1179-1721
Chronological summary of major developments in glaucoma nomenclature before the 20th century.
| YEAR | GLAUCOMA WITH A NORMAL APPEARING EYE (SUCH AS PRIMARY OPEN-ANGLE GLAUCOMA) | GLAUCOMA WITH AN ABNORMAL EYE APPEARANCE (AS IN ACUTE ANGLE-CLOSURE GLAUCOMA) |
|---|---|---|
| 8th century BC | Though | |
| 4th century BC | ||
| Early Common Era | Amaurosis (severe) and amblyopia (mild) described vision impairment with a normal-appearing eye | A dilated pupil (mydriasis), inflamed eye (ophthalmia), and discolored pupil ( |
| Medieval Arabic Period (800–1050 AD) | ||
| Latin works of the Middle Ages (12th–16th centuries) | Loss of vision with a normal-appearing eye was termed | The unfavorable pupillary hue was more specifically described as green ( |
| Renaissance developments (16th–17th centuries AD) | Banister described a palpably hard eye in | The lens was understood to be normally located anteriorly and capable of causing visual disorders by pressing against the iris. Lens disorders that did not improve with couching could produce a green pupil and a hard eye |
| More complete descriptions of angle-closure glaucoma (1707–1849) | Amaurosis was only rarely stated to involve a palpably hard eye | Mydriasis, ophthalmia, and a green pupil were integrated into one syndrome, often called glaucoma and noted to involve a palpably hard eye. Authors agreed on the clinical findings, but could not agree on whether glaucoma was due to a disorder of the lens, or more posterior structures (eg, vitreous or choroid) |
| The era of the ophthalmoscope (after 1850) | An excavated optic neuropathy was observed, often associated with elevated intraocular pressure in quiet eyes with a normal pupil and in inflamed eyes with a dilated (and sometimes green or gray) pupil. Both conditions became known as “glaucoma” | |
Figure 1A green mid-dilated pupil and an intraocular pressure of 50 mmHg, seen in bilateral angle-closure glaucoma and choroiditis due to Hodgkin lymphoma in a 27-year-old male. Courtesy of Wolters Kluwer Health (Baillif et al, 2011).18 Promotional and commercial use of the material in print, digital or mobile device format is prohibited without the permission of the publisher Wolters Klower Health.
Figure 2A green, dilated pupil in acute angle-closure glaucoma. No fluorescein was instilled before the photograph. Courtesy of and personal communication (2014) Paulo Pierre-Filho, MD.
Figure 3A green, fixed, mid-dilated left pupil in a 70-year-old woman with 3 days of left eye pain and a left afferent pupillary defect. Visual acuity was hand motions in the left eye. The left eye had an intraocular pressure of 46 mmHg, and a narrow anterior chamber angle by gonioscopy. The diagnosis of acute angle-closure glaucoma was made. Medical treatment ended the attack. Cataract surgery of the left eye was performed. No fluorescein was instilled before the photograph.
Figure 4A grayish-green, mid-dilated pupil in acute angle-closure glaucoma. Courtesy of Jonathan Trobe, MD, and the University of Michigan Kellogg Eye Center.
Figure 5A green, dilated pupil in a 70-year-old woman with acute angle-closure glaucoma and an intraocular pressure of 62 mmHg, secondary to intraocular hemorrhage from macular degeneration while on anticoagulants. Courtesy of Springer Science and Business Media (Schlote et al, 2005).20
Figure 6A greenish-gray, dilated pupil due to acute angle-closure attack in the right eye with an intraocular pressure over 70 mmHg. Courtesy of Andrew Doan, MD, PhD.
Figure 7A gray pupil is seen in some instances of angle-closure glaucoma. A 54-year-old male with 2 days of right eye pain. The right eye intraocular pressure was 60 mmHg. The visual acuity in the right eye was hand motions, and had been poor for 1 year. The right pupil was fixed and dilated. The attack ended following medical treatment and iridotomy of the right eye. Right eye cataract surgery was performed. The examiner is holding the eyelids open during the photograph. No fluorescein was instilled before the photograph.
Descriptions of vision loss consistent with angle-closure glaucoma.
| DESCRIPTION | AUTHOR (DATE) |
|---|---|
| Mydriasis, lens pressing into the iris | Felix Platter (1664), |
| Mydriasis, large lens, pressing into the iris | Antoine Maitre Jan (1707), |
| Glaucoma involves bilateral, sequential, mydriasis, eye pain, and a sea-colored pupil | Charles Saint-Yves (1722), |
| Glaucoma involves mydriasis, a large and anteriorly prominent lens, pressing against the iris, a narrow anterior chamber, green pupil, and eye pain | John Taylor (1736), |
| Glaucoma involves mydriasis, a large lens, a palpably hard eye, pain, sea-colored pupil | Johannes Zacharias Platner (1745), |
| Glaucoma involves mydriasis, a palpably hard eye, a sea-colored pupil, pain, and a large and anteriorly prominent lens | George Chandler (1775) |
| Glaucoma involves mydriasis, an anteriorly prominent lens, narrow anterior chamber, pain, and conjunctival injection, and a green pupil | William Mackenzie (1833), |
Notes:
Did not use the term glaucoma to describe this condition.
Also described another type of “glaucoma” of the vitreous which involved a soft eye and was absolutely incurable.
Figure 8Cross-sectional diagram of the glaucomatous eye (top) and normal eye (bottom) as illustrated in the 19th century.83 Glaucoma was ascribed to anterior displacement of the lens, pressing against the iris, causing mydriasis and a narrow anterior chamber,83 well before the development of gonioscopy and cross-sectional imaging.