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Is Mental Stress the Primary Cause of Glaucoma?

Journal

KLINISCHE MONATSBLATTER FUR AUGENHEILKUNDE
Volume 238, Issue 2, Pages 132-144

Publisher

GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG
DOI: 10.1055/a-1303-8025

Keywords

glaucoma; low vision; mental stress; vascular dysregulation; personality; vision restoration

Categories

Funding

  1. VELUX Foundation

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Chronic emotional stress may be a possible cause of glaucoma, affecting not only intraocular pressure but also vascular dysregulation in the eye and brain. In addition to standard therapy, stress reduction through relaxation techniques may be beneficial for patients.
The prognosis of going blind is very stressful for patients diagnosed with glaucoma. Worries and fear of losing independence is a constantmental burden, with secondary risks of depression and social isolation. But stress is not only a result of glaucoma but also a possible cause (risk factor). This should not be surprising, given that chronic stress can trigger psychosomatic organ dysfunctions anywhere in the body. Why should the organ eye be an exception? Indeed, glaucoma patients often suspect that severe emotional stress caused their visual field loss or foggy vision. The hypothesis that stress is a possible cause of glaucoma is supported by differ- ent observations: (i) acute and chronic stress increases intraocular pressure and (ii) long-term stress can lead to vascular dysregulation of the microcirculation in the eye and brain (Flammer's syndrome), leading to partial hypoxia and hypoglycaemia (hypo- metabolism). Even if nerve cells do not die, they may then become inactive (silent neurons). (iii) Degenerative changes have been reported in the brain of glaucoma patients, affecting not only anterograde or transsynaptic areas of the central visual pathway, but degeneration is also found (iv) in brain areas involved in emotional appraisal and the physiological regulation of stress hormones. There are also psychological hints indicating that stress is a cause of glaucoma: (v) Glaucoma patients with Flammer's syndrome show typical personality traits that are associated with low stress resilience: they often have cold hands or feet, are ambitious (professionally successful), perfectionistic, obsessive, brooding and worrying a lot. (vi) If stress hormone levels and inflammation parameters are reduced in glaucoma patients by relaxation with meditation, this correlates with normalisation of intraocular pressure, and yet another clue is that (vii) visual field improvements after non-invasive current stimulation therapy, that are known to improve circulation and neuronal synchronisation, are much most effective in patients with stress resilient personalities. An appreciation of stress as a cause of glaucoma suggests that in addition to standard therapy (i) stress reduction through relaxation techniques should be recommended (e.g. meditation), and ( ii) self-medication compliance should not be induced by kindling anxiety and worries with negative communication (You will go blind!), but communication should be positive (The prognosis is optimistic).

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