
Volume 6, Number 1
Spring, 1997
How Does Lifestyle
Affect Glaucoma?
by George L. Spaeth, MD
Once a person has glaucoma,
his or her eyes are predisposed to more damage. Anything causing
the eyes not to get the nutrients they need will increase the
damage. Thus, marked malnutrition, such as the thiamin deficiency
common in some parts of the world, damages tissues such as the
optic nerve. Other forms of malnutrition (protein deficiency,
other vitamin deficiencies, etc.) can also be damaging.
Obesity
At the other extreme, obesity
also can predispose to damage and is in fact a major reason why
some people with glaucoma get worse. Obese people may get worse
because some people who are heavily overweight may have a biological
mechanism that causes them to handle food improperly, and that
abnormal biological mechanism may apply to tissues in the eye
as well as to those elsewhere in the body.
Obese people also have difficulty
breathing, and thus the optic nerve may not get enough oxygen
to be fully nourished. Also, obese people tend to have high blood
pressure, which predisposes to abnormality of the small blood
vessels that nourish the optic nerve.
It may also be that psychological
mechanisms are involved, so that the person who is seriously overweight
may fail to do those things that are necessary to preserve his
or her health in other ways.
Diet
Between the extremes of severe
malnutrition and obesity, relatively little is known about the
relationship between diet and the development of glaucoma. But
it seems safe to conclude that it is prudent to have a diet which
is neither deficient in any of the essential requirements nor
excessive enough to cause obesity. Some authors have suggested
that foods such as carrots and peppers may be beneficial. Others
have touted the value of vitamin C, bilberry extract, and gingko.
Many years ago, I looked
for a possible beneficial effect of vitamin C and the B vitamins
on the course of glaucoma but could find none. It may have been
that the doses weren't appropriate or that the study didn't proceed
long enough, but no beneficial effect was apparent. Now that more
is known about the various types of glaucomas it is important
to study in detail whether some of these agents may in fact be
beneficial or perhaps even harmful in individual patients with
glaucoma. Foundation researchers are already planning such studies.
Exercise
Many years ago a study performed
at Washington University in St. Louis demonstrated that people
with the type of glaucoma in which the optic nerve becomes damaged
even though intraocular pressure is low are more likely to have
progressive damage if they are sedentary than if they exercise.
Researchers have discovered that vigorous, repeated exercise over
a prolonged period of time can lower intraocular pressure around
4 mm Hg. For a person whose intraocular pressure is around 25
mm Hg, and in whom a pressure of 25 mm Hg is high enough to produce
damage, a 4-mm Hg lowering of intraocular pressure may be enough
to prevent further damage.
One wonders why so little
attention has been paid to this report. So much has been written
about the importance of "exercise" that it's become quite a fad.
In fact it is not totally clear that exercise is quite as beneficial
as some authors would lead us to believe. It may be that the reason
why people who exercise appear to be healthier and live longer
is because they are healthier to start with, and for that reason
they exercise. Exercise also is important for the eye because
it helps prevent weight gain and keep blood pressure normal. Prolonged
high blood pressure can damage the small blood vessels that nourish
the optic nerve, decreasing the ability of the nerve to resist
the damaging effects of intraocular pressure.
On the other hand, insufficient
blood flow in the large vessels that lead from the heart up into
the head, the carotid arteries, can cause a generalized decrease
in blood flow to the eye, depriving the optic nerve the nutrients
it needs to be healthy.
These various and quite different
abnormalities of blood flow and regulation of blood flow and how
they affect the healthy or sick eye are becoming better understood
and are clearly of importance in the development of glaucoma.
A person's lifestyle significantly affects the person's cardiovascular
system. Thus, not only may there be a direct effect on intraocular
pressure or exercise and diet, but there may be indirect effects
that relate to maintaining a healthy cardiovascular system. For
example, were an individual to participate in a high-altitude
road race and not be properly acclimatized, it is reasonable to
assume that blood would be shunted away from the eyes to the heart
and the muscles, and the person might well have an insufficiency
of blood flowing to the eye during the period of the race, resulting
in damage to the eye.
Also for example, when blood
pressure falls rapidly, as, for example, from severe bleeding
during childbirth or as a result of injury, blood flow to the
eye may decrease suddenly, causing serious, irreversible damage
to the optic nerve. Other situations that may result in an instability
of blood pressure include changing position, or taking drugs that
affect blood pressure.
Managing Our Lives
Another aspect of lifestyle
relates to whether or not a person's glaucoma will get worse is
the person's ability to manage his or her own life in the broadest
terms. Does the individual know how to listen to his or her own
body? Is the person a denier, who does not pay attention to the
fact that he or she is losing some visual field? Does the person
know how to communicate with his or her physician well, having
the ability to articulate clearly the problems and concerns that
he or she has? Does the patient know how to use the doctor well,
making sure that questions are answered fully and that all concerns
are appropriately addressed? Is the person sufficiently disciplined
to keep appointments and use medications on schedule? Does the
person learn what he or she needs to know to have the best chance
of maintaining health?
General Health
Over 50 years ago, Duke-Elder
described glaucoma as "a sick eye in a sick body." Though an oversimplification,
there is much truth in his comment. Although some types of glaucoma
appear to have nothing to do with generalized illness, with regard
to many types of glaucoma, the person's general health definitely
plays a role in whether or not the glaucoma gets worse. A person's
general health is a result of a complex interaction between the
person's basic genetic structure and the world to which that genetic
structure is exposed: the foods, the toxins, and all those other
aspects of the way we live that affect the way our genes are expressed.
Dangers of Generalization
One of the serious errors
with regard to glaucoma has been oversimplifying the condition.
It is a serious mistake to consider one mechanism of glaucoma
damage applicable to everybody. So also is it a serious error
to generalize regarding specific aspects of lifestyle or therapy.
For example, while exercise may be beneficial for many individuals,
exercise so strenuous that it results in a decrease in blood flow
to the optic nerve can make the patient's glaucoma worse. Some
drugs may well make one person's glaucoma better and another person's
glaucoma worse.
It is each person's responsibility
to define for himself or herself what lifestyle is most conducive
to his or her unique complement of genes being most fully expressed
and least likely to be damaged.
Patients frequently ask whether
they should stop drinking coffee or stop drinking large amounts
of water. The proper answer is almost certainly that there is
no single answer, with the exception of avoiding obvious excesses.
Those things that predispose to the health of the body probably
predispose to the health of the eye as well.
For some that may mean the
total avoidance of some things such as coffee, wine, or cheddar
cheese. But for most, it means developing a life in which one
learns to listen to one's own body and spirit, and to cherish
those things that are nourishing and to eschew those that will
not lead to a sense of well-being. Surely among the most important
factors that affect our health are the way we think, feel, love,
and live.

Patient Support Group Grows
The Glaucoma Patient Support Group sponsored by the Foundation
has been meeting monthly since January. At these sessions, Wills
staff physician Dr. Linda Pape has been talking with glaucoma
patients and their families about the challenges facing them and
responding to their many questions. The group has been meeting
in the large waiting room outside the Glaucoma Service of Wills
Eye Hospital on the second Sunday of each month from 2:30 to 4:30PM.
From a first meeting of four
attendees, the gatherings have grown to a stable group of about
25, with an additional 25 on the mailing list.
There will be no meetings
in July and August, but plans are now being made for a full complement
of monthly programs beginning in September. Interested persons
may call Ken Parker at 215-928-3282 to have their names placed
on the mailing list to receive announcements or email at
parker@willsglaucoma.org.
Glaucoma Patient Support
Group members chat among themselves after hearing Dr. Christine
Johnston of the Beck Institute speak about dealing with some
of the emotional problems faced by glaucoma patients.
(Photo
by Ken Parker)

Brazilian
Doctors Observe and Perform Research
Two young ophthalmologists
from Brazil--Sergio Luis de Luca, MD, from Sao Paulo, and
Renato de Carvalho Costa, MD, from Rio Preto--are the most
recent in a long line of international observers and researchers
who have come to the Glaucoma Service eager to learn the
latest concepts in the diagnosis and management of glaucoma
and help in Foundation-sponsored research projects.
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Sergio Luis de Luca, MD
(Photo by Ken Parker)
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Foundation Leadership Strengthened
S. Stoney Simons and John
Callahan
Two remarkable individuals who recently have begun working in
leadership positions will be key in helping the Foundation meet
this goal and grow into its full potential.

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S. Stoney Simons,
who is now serving as Chairman of the Board, brings to the
Foundation a background of 20 years' leadership experience
at SmithKime Beecham in marketing, research and development,
service on a variety of Boards, including those of Chestnut
Hill Hospital and Fox Chase Cancer Center, and key positions
in health consultancy, insurance, and banking. |

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John Callahan, as Senior
Advisor, is contributing his superb development skills nurtured
during his 24-year-stint as General Secretary of Amherst
College and nearly 10 years as Senior Staff Member at the
American Philosophical Society.
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Jonathan Myers,
MD, former resident at Wills Eye Hospital, and now just completing
a glaucoma fellowship at Duke University, will join the Foundation
as Associate Research Director in July. He is expected to
bring a new level of competence and commitment to the Foundation's
burgeoning research program. Dr. Myers will be working with
Dr. James Augsburger of Wills, who already has contributed
enormously to the quality of our research program.
The Foundation's primary goal, appointment
of a fulltime research professor, awaits the development
of more funds. $1.5 has been committed for this purpose,
but an estimated $1 million more will be needed. |
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Ken Parker, Executive
Director for the past eight years, will continue in that
post. Notable among his achievements have been publication
of the Searchlight on Glaucoma, with a current circulation
of over 10,000. Also, he remains committed to the development
of a strong patient support group. |
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