Abstract

Dementia and glaucoma are both neurodegenerative conditions characterized by neuronal loss leading to cognitive and visual dysfunction, respectively. A variety of evidence exists linking the two diseases including structural signs, specifically degenerative changes within ganglion cells. Both diseases become more prevalent with increased age, but that alone is unlikely to account for the increased co-prevalence of the diseases found in various studies. Neurotoxic substances including abnormal hyperphosphorylated tau and amyloid-β have been found in both disease processes suggesting possible pathophysiologic links between the diseases. The exact mechanism of apoptosis, whether by direct toxicity or potentiation, still needs to be established, but could prove important for both diseases. Another potential link relates to low intracranial pressure in patients with both diseases causing a high translaminar pressure gradient and optic nerve damage in certain patients. While this alone may not account for direct optic nerve damage, it could lead to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) circulatory failure causing increased neurotoxins along the optic nerves with resultant damage. All of this evidence suggests the need to further study links between the two diseases, as this could prove instrumental in understanding their overlapping pathophysiology and developing directed therapies for both diseases. While this is more thoroughly investigated, it may be prudent to have a lower threshold for a glaucoma work-up in patients with pre-existing dementia.

Highlights

  • Dementia refers to a group of neurodegenerative conditions in which cognitive and/or behavioral symptoms interfere with an individual’s ability to Received: 31‐05‐2014Accepted: 30‐06‐2014Access this article onlineQuick Response Code: Website: www.jovr.org function, representing a decline from prior levels of functioning.[1]

  • In a retrospective study of patients who underwent lumbar puncture (LP), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure was found to be significantly lower in patients with primary open angle glaucoma (POAG) (9.2 mmHg) as compared to patients without glaucoma (13.0 mmHg).[25]

  • The authors suggested that this pressure difference may lead to a high trans‐laminar pressure difference, which subsequently may play a role in glaucomatous optic nerve damage

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Summary

Introduction

Dementia refers to a group of neurodegenerative conditions in which cognitive and/or behavioral symptoms interfere with an individual’s ability to Received: 31‐05‐2014Accepted: 30‐06‐2014Access this article onlineQuick Response Code: Website: www.jovr.org function, representing a decline from prior levels of functioning.[1]. In a study by Yoneda et al, investigators measured β‐amyloid1‐42 (Aβ42) and tau levels in the vitreous in patients undergoing vitrectomy for macular hole, diabetic retinopathy, and other ocular diseases with concurrent glaucoma.[17] Compared with the control macular hole group, there was a significant decrease in the Aβ42 level and a significant increase in the tau level in the other two groups.

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