Abstract

We reviewed the charts of 144 randomly selected patients with primary open-angle glaucoma who had Aulhorn's stage 1, 2, or 3 visual field defects to investigate whether primary open-angle glaucoma patients with predominantly inferior visual field defects had a higher prevalence of diabetes mellitus than primary open-angle glaucoma patients without such visual field defects. Of the 59 patients with mainly inferior visual field defects in one or both eyes, 19 (32%) had diabetes mellitus, while 11 of 85 (13%) patients without such defects had diabetes mellitus. This difference was statistically significant (P = 0.0096). These results suggest that primary open-angle glaucoma patients with predominantly inferior visual field defects in one or both eyes are more likely to have diabetes and that such patients with no known history of diabetes may benefit from glucose tolerance testing to detect occult impaired glucose tolerance or diabetes mellitus.

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