Angle Closure Glaucoma From Prozac

Prozac is as common as aspirin today (and probably much safer).  It is in the category of selective serotonin re uptake inhibitors which is a long winded way of saying it makes the molecule serotonin stay around longer instead of being recycled.

This allows a prolonged action of  serotonin, one of the feel good molecules used to treat depression and a variety of other conditions. The eye has numerous receptor sites where serotonin acts, though they are not well understood at this time. Other prescription drugs you may have heard of somewhat similar to Prozac are Paxil, Zoloft, Cymbalta, Lexapro, and  Luvox.

One thing they share in common is a tendency to mildly dilate the pupils. This is rarely a problem, but if you have been told you have” Narrow Angles” or are susceptible to angle closure glaucoma it can be a concern. Farsighted patients (Hyperopic) have smaller drainage angles for the fluid inside the eye to escape back into the general circulation. With age, the lens inside the eye grows and moves forward, further restricting the drainage channels. When you enter into a dark room or movie theater the pupil naturally dilates also. When dilated, the colored tissue known as the iris bunches up it’s outside edges. This thickens it right at the location where the fluid is supposed to drain out. In a normal eye there is plenty of extra space to compensate for this but eyes with narrow angles start to be blocked by the bunched up iris tissue. Eventually, the drainage can be completely blocked and since fluid is  being produced in the eye the pressure skyrockets up.

Normally this results in an acute attack of a very painful, blurry red eye with nausea and headaches. Drugs like Prozac in a rare handful of cases have been known to push this process over the edge and precipitate angle closure glaucoma attacks. While highly unlikely, if you have narrow angles you should be aware of this, since this form of glaucoma is curable with early treatment.

The other possibility from this category of drugs is a transient rise in eye pressure for several weeks (though some cases report drops in pressure). If you have just started Prozac or a similar drug and your eye pressure readings are a little high, discuss this with your optometrist and have the pressures retested in 2-3 weeks. There is usually a return to normal if it is a mild medication induced increase.

A retest in a few weeks could save you money on unnecessary treatment and testing.

Finally, be happy that we have medications that have such better safety profiles than the prior generation.

Optometric Nutrition Society-Diet and Eye Health

The Optometric Nutrition Society

A Professional Society Whose Time Has Come

Dr.David Kisling of Fort Collins,Colorado has become an active member of The Optometric Nutrition Society.  Lifestyle modification and nutrient intake are proving to play an important role in vision health and eye disease prevention. Several studies have shown a correlation with nutrition and chronic eye disease. This area of study has become a focus of primary vision care doctors.

The purpose of the Optometric Nutrition Society is to:

To promote excellence in the care of optometric patients through nutritional support of eye health and the prevention and control of ocular and systemic disease.
To sponsor professional symposia as well as a website, and to generate materials to educate professionals regarding the role of nutrition in systemic and ocular health.
To provide a collegial atmosphere where health care professionals can exchange ideas and concepts regarding nutritional influences on vision.
Provide a resource pool of clinically relevant refereed studies that support the role of safe nutritional support for the management of ocular and systemic disease.
To monitor and validate claims made by industry regarding the quality and efficacy of nutritional supplements.
To encourage the inclusion of nutrition education in the curricula of optometry schools.

The society closely monitors peer-reviewed published science on nutritional influence on eye health, as well as safety and ethical issues regarding specific micronutrients included in supplements being marketed to vision patients.

For more information contact:

Name:    Dr David Kisling, O.D.
Address 181 West Boardwalk Ste. 201
Fort Collins,CO. 80525
Phone:     (970) 226-0959
Email       info@harmonyeyes.net

Contact Lenses Star Trek Style

Babak A. Parviz of the University of Washington is working on futuristic contact lens technology. His research includes work on contact lenses incorporating sensors for glucose monitoring for diabetics and potentially contact leness as display monitors out of the science fiction realm. If you are interested in where contact lens technology may lead to in the future his work and publications are a fun read.

In terms of futuristic contact lens technology the question remains where the corneal molding technology disappeared to. Several years back a California company had developed a permanent technique for reshaping the cornea to adjust the prescription. It involved a prescription medication to soften the collagen bonds of the cornea temporarily, and several days of rigid contact lens wear to reshape the tissue while in this malleable state. Oddly, it seems to have vanished after having some very positive reports.

Current technology not being used clinically allows determing blood glucose levels by utilizing laser or infared light directed into the fluid inside the anterior chamber, the front part of the eye. This fluid is referred to as the aqueous humor and the glucose levels allow an estimation of the blood levels.

A new type of contact lens should be on the market within a year. Developed at Harvard University it will allow constant steady release of eye medications instead of the variation in dosing levels that ocurrs with prescription eye drops. Other competitors are in the market. I have seen the effectiveness of this using todays contact lenses saturated with eye medications in off label applications. It should be a great option for certain eye diseases. I suspect glaucoma will be one of the first contact lens applications where it will deliver results like an insulin pump can for a diabetic who has wide swings in blood sugar levels when control was tried with injections.

Patents exist for photochromatic contact lenses that darken with sunlight and act as a sunlens. When this will see the “light of day” is unknown. Patents also exsist for liquid contact lenses. Researchers have looked for eyedrops to act as temporary corrective liquid lenses for years-maybe someday an eyedrop a day will keep the eye doctor at bay.

Contact lenses with added components to prevent infections are under study and probably will reach the market place in the next few years.

Custom eye specific shaped contact lenses are certainly going to be a part of the future. Wether you know it or not, you suffer from more vision problems than nearsightedness and astigmtism. You also have trefoil, quadrafoil, spherical abberation and other optical misfortunes degrading your vision. The future will only look better!

Soft Contact Lens Irritatation Eyelid-GPC

SIX SIGNS YOU MAY HAVE GPC

FROM YOUR CONTACT LENSES

  • Itchy eyes as contact lenses get older

  • Lenses that slide and stick under the upper eye lid

  • Irritation Every Time You Blink

  • Mucous Discharge and Foggy Vision

  • Lenses That Discolor and Develop a Film

  • Intermittent Red Eye With Feeling Something is Scratching Your Eye

In the early years of soft contact lenses there was one choice, the Bausch & Lomb Soft Lens. The cost of a single pair of these miraculous new soft, comfortable lenses was between $300 and $400 when first introduced in 1971. Accounting for inflation, today that would be almost $2000. There was a very strong financial incentive to make the lenses last as long as possible. Using enzyme cleaners and sending lenses off for a special factory cleaning were common procedures. Lenses were often used for 3 to 4 years until they were yellowed and covered with numerous deposits from components of the tear film. Lipid bumps, calcium and mineral deposits, protein deposits and frequent tears and little missing chunks of the lens edges were tolerated well past the healthy tolerance of the eyes.

A new eye problem begin to show up in a number of the wearers of these new soft contact lenses. As lens technology progressed and prices came down lenses were replaced more frequently and the mystery red eye syndrome seemed to drop off. Then in 1981 the Hydrocurve soft contact lenses was introduced as the first contact lens for over night wear, the advent of extended wear contact lenses.  Cases of this new eye problem started to show up again and become common enough to recognize and diagnose.

The typical patient would come in to see the optometrist complaining about eyes that were red and irritated, possibly itching, and contact lenses that would slide around on the eye, sometimes falling out with blinking. On further questioning the lenses usually were sliding up as they would occasionally adhere to the underside of the upper eyelid. Frequently there would be some clear mucous or discharge from the eye, and some contact lens wearers would tell their eye doctor they kept seeing little spots on the surface of the lenses when they were handling them.

People have often admitted to me they turned their upper eyelids inside out as kids. For some unknown reason, girls more than boys, at least by admission. What was found in the 1980′s when inverting the upper eyelid is now referred to as Giant Papillary Conjunctivitis, or GPC. Usually it is referred to as GPC. There is a clear tissue that covers the white scleral part of your eye and extends underneath the eyelids as their surface lining. In GPC, giant papillae  (bumps of swollen tissue) form under the upper eyelid. These are described as giant but actually are about 1/3 millimeter in diameter. They do feel giant due to the highly sensitive nature of the clear tissue on the front of your eye, the cornea. Every blink rubs these bumps across the cornea and creates discomfort.

The cause of GPC has been disputed for years but most eye care providers agree there are two components, a mechanical irritation and an immunological reaction.

The lens edge constantly engages the underside of the eyelid with each blink that results in a form of low grade irritation and inflammatory reaction in a small percentage of contact lens wearers. There are probably multiple reasons such as how taunt or floppy the lid is, how the secretions make it more prone to slide over or stick to the lens, the variations in lid curvature that apply pressure to the lens at different areas, and if the conjunctiva tissue has a higher number of inflammatory mediators already present. Deposits on the lenses can also cause a mechanical type of reaction.

The immunological reaction is related to deposits that build up on the lenses. These can be your own tear lipids,proteins, preservatives in contact lens solutions that build up in the lens matrix, environmental allergens that build up on the lens, and in rare cases possibly the material the lens is made of. Since soft lenses are about half water they act like a sponge absorbing larger molecules and retaining them resulting in increasing levels over time.

Wearing the same pair of lenses for several years obviously caused an increase in this condition.  The hard lenses worn prior to soft contact lenses can still cause GPC, but because they are inert and do not absorb any water the incidence is very low. With the advent of extended wear, the eyes were given constant exposure to the mechanical and immunological irritants with no recovery time so the incidence started climbing again.

In the first era of contact lens technology lenses were frequently machined on a lathe when dry then re-hydrated. Bausch & Lomb developed spin casting the liquid material in a mold. Today automation and molding manufacturing techniques allow for much more precise and smooth lens edges. Lens that were hand inspected under a microscope in the past are now quality controlled by automated systems. These have been quantum  improvements in lens quality that have helped decrease lens edge induced GPC problems.  Extended wear contact lens materials are starting to be designed today to help resist deposits better.  For a number of years now the major contact lens manufacturers have been using large molecule preservatives that exceed the pore size of soft contact lenses. This greatly reduces the possibility of toxic preservatives inside the lens over time. Unfortunately, many generic solutions appear similar but often contain the older small molecule preservatives that can lead to GPC.

Even though the occurrence is much lower today, GPC can still be a major eye irritant and contact lens problem. There are several approaches to managing GPC. Switching to daily disposable lenses eliminates coating reactions completely since the lenses are thrown away daily and never exposed to disinfecting solutions. Usually, contact lens wearers with GPC have been wearing their contacts well beyond the suggested replacement cycle and become lax in cleaning the lenses. Returning to a normal 2-4 week replacement cycle and  discontinuing or decreasing overnight wear may be all that is required to return the eye to normal health.

Prescription eye drops are also a large part of treating GPC. A class of eye drops called mast cell stabilizers work to stabilize the cells membranes from releasing histamine that starts the inflammatory cycle. These eye drops are very safe and can be used year round when needed. Other options are available and today GPC is no longer the end of your contact lens career, only a small bump in the (eye) road.  Vision Insurance like Vision Service Plan Frequently offer plans that include medical treatment for conditions like GPC. You should do an annual review of all of your medical and vision coverage to make sure you are providing the best benefits you can for your family.

Childrens Eyes Need UV Protection to Prevent Blinddness

Do your child a favor when they visit their optometrist for back to school eye exam this year. Discuss sunwear protection with the eye doctor. Lifetime doses of UV radiation from the sun are associated with nuclear sclerosis. This is a type of cataract where the lens yellows then turns brown similar to plastic left outdoors for a few years. UV exposure has also been implicated as a risk factor for macular degeneration, and recent studies suggest even visible blue light may be damaging.

If you live in an area like Fort Collins at high altitude and snow,  closer to the equator, or spend time around lakes or the ocean, your child’s exposure rate is much higher.

Think of sun protection for the eyes just like sun protection for the skin. No reputable childcare center allows children on outdoor excursions without sunscreen. It should be the same for your child’s eyes. UV (Ultraviolet) protection with sunwear that is tinted or transitions lenses that are clear indoors and darken outdoors are both good options. If you child spends a large amount of time in outdoor activities consider sunglasses that wrap around on the side.  If you Normal eye glasses  may allow 35% of the light in from the side. Gray is the tint that alters color perception the least but brown is popular also.

For non prescription sun wear avoid the cheap $5.00 variety. Look for something with an 100% UV protection. Expect to pay $30 to $40 at minimum for the quality your child deserves. Poor quality sunwear may actually damage your child’s eyes by dilating them and allowing more UV exposure with inadequate protection.

By starting early you are providing preventative care for two of the leading causes of blindness.

Dry Eye Epidemic

Woman With Dry Eye SyndromeThere is a new epidemic that is running rampant across the United States. Fortunately it is not contagious and not life threatening like the Swine Flu, but there is a tremendous cost in terms of loss of quality of life and vision. This epidemic is often referred to as Dry Eye Syndrome and effects millions of people with symptoms ranging from mild, vague discomfort to completely disabling pain and chronic blurred eyesight.The Dry Rye Epidemic has multiple causes.

  • Time spent by adults on computers and youth on video games dramatically lowers the normal blink rate and causes the eyes to dry out faster than normal.
  • Historically, before mass consumption of processed foods, for every unit of omega-3 fat we consumed in our diet we ate 1 to 4 units of omega 6. Today that ratio has shifted to 20-30 times more omega 6 fats in our diets than omega-3. This has caused an outbreak of disease of the eyelid margins and resultant poor tear film quality.
  • As the population has aged there has been an increase due to normal, age related decreases in tear production.
  • The large increase in prescription medication use has resulted in numerous drugs being used that contribute to dry eyes. Medications for blood pressure, depression, allergies, pain, and many other conditions can have drying effects.
  • Millions of women treated with hormonal replacement therapy in the past may have increased the dry eye epidemic.
  • With the shift to industrialized society, working indoors the patterns of airflow and humidity have been altered and effect the incidence of dry eyes.
  • The long term shift away from water consumption towards caffeinated beverages and colas aggravates dry eyes in some individuals.
  • Even the increase in obesity leads to low grade inflammation in the body which can decrease tear production.
  • Many eyedrops, prescription and over the counter, can  cause or aggravate dry eyes to the point that some patients discontinue their treatment and suffer sight loss.
  • Perhaps the worse culprit in the dry eye epidemic is LASIK eye surgery. The nerves that drive the eyes to blink are cut by the surgery and dryness is a frequent complaint after surgery. The dryness sometimes persists and requires long term treatment.

Fortunately we have many options today, including prescription eye  medications, new contact lens materials, glaucoma  eye drops designed for dry eyes, nutritional supplements, and even  micro-plugs implants for the tear ducts to help increase the basal level of moisture. If you feel you have symptoms of dry eyes please call and request an appointment for a dry eye evaluation. Your vision insurance service plan may provide coverage for dry eye treatment.

Symptoms could be any of the following:

  1. Burning or stinging if the eyes
  2. Eyes that intermittently water excessivley
  3. Eye that feel griity at times
  4. Vision that blurs up for brief periods of time
  5. Pink or red eyes
  6. Vision discomfort that gets worse as the day progresses
  7. Developing intolerance to contact lenses
  8. An increase in the normal level of itchy eye allergies
  9. Frequent styes and eye infections

CALL: 970-226-0959

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Genetic Eye Disease Testing Aids Optometrists

Research on eye genes that cause or predispose individual to eye disease is a fast growing area which will probably find it’s way into your eye doctors office in the next 5-10 years. Most genetic tests are not perfect in the sense they are not diagnostic of an eye disease, but they frequently tell optometrists who may be more susceptible to acquiring the vision problem

Macular Degeneration-NEI

Macular Degeneration-NEI

in the first place, or which individuals may be prone to more severe forms.

Almost 500 genes have been identified that contribute to diseases of the eyes.  Mutations in the DNA  associated with a number of eye diseases, including glaucoma, cataracts, strabismus, corneal dystrophies different types of retinal degeneration. Diseases thought to be untreatable in the not to distant past are now being  targeted for future gene-based therapies.

Family members with relatives affected with genetic based eye diseases may want to know their risk factors and also for any future children. Unfortunately, testing is not readily available today, but the National Eye Institute is working to develop member labs to have this service  readily available at some point in the future.

The program initiated  to undertake this effort is referred to as the eyeGENETM program. It is a national progrma oordinating center, a centralized repository for blood/DNA/cell lines, several CLIA laboratories and a shared genotype / phenotype database. The goal of the NEI is to augment, not diminish, existing university-based and commercial ventures, while providing a new entry portal with rapid, reliable, and easy access to medical professionals.

Access to patient samples coupled to anonymous phenotypic data will augment the pace of ophthalmic genetics research, leading to improved medical decision making, clinical trials, and treatments for genetic eye diseases.

Blindness Prevention and Treatment-Free Glaucoma Treatment

The leading causes of blindness in the U.S are diabetic related eye complications, glaucoma, and macular degeneration. Cataracts are generally listed as the number one cause but this is somewhat misleading.

Cataracts effect in excess of 20 million people but most cataracts are treatable with modern surgical techniques and artificial lens implants. The complication rate is low. While some cataracts may be inoperable due to other health problems, most can be successfully removed. Many cases of blindness attributed to cataracts are actually due to preexisting retinal problems such as macular degeneration and advanced glaucoma. If the retina is not healthy to start with, removing the cataract will not restore vision, and the low level of vision categorized as blindness is actually not due to cataracts. The cost of cataract surgery is a barrier to treatment to the uninsured and can account for some of the large numbers of blindness attributed to cataracts.

Next to cataracts, diabetic complications in the eye do result in blindness in over 4 million people. With the current increase in obesity in our culture, especially in youth, this is a serious concern for the future. Most diabetes related blindness is due to changes in the blood vessels in the retina that causes microanuysms, bleeding, proliferation of fragile new blood vessels, and detachments of the retinal tissue. There is a correlation with how many years the diabetes has been present and how well the blood sugar has been controlled. Early treatment of retinal complications is a proven method of greatly lowering the incidence of blindness.

Glaucoma also is responsible for several million cases of blindness. Glaucoma has traditionally been thought of as high pressure in the eye. Today it is gradually becoming viewed as a circulatory problems to the optic nerve and a neurodegenerative disease, where the death of the nerves are a vital part of the disease. This will greatly alter our treatment regimins at some point in the future as we transition to using drugs to protect the nerve health and increase blood circulation.

All three of these conditions are primarily a condition of aging and as the population ages the incidence is increasing. All three are also highly likely to prove amendable to lifestlye and nutritional intervetion at early stages.

Protection of the lens in the eye from UV exposure and enrichment of the diet with food and nutriional supplements containing lutein and zeaxanthin appears to show promise. Eating a diet with a low glycemic index (limiting refined sugars, eating complex carbohydrates like whole grains, and lost of vegetables) also will probably be shown to reduce cataracts. Finally, like the other leading causes of blindness, reducing obesity will reduce cataract fomration. While vitaimin E and C have been shown in recent studies not to reduce cataract formation. I do not beleive this will prove to be true with repeated studies. I do beleive antioxidants will be shown over time to be useful but it may be true in the context of whole foods and balanced diets, not in the form of supplementation.

Macualr degeneration has it’s proven formula manufactured by Bausc & Lomb under the name of Preservision which was shown in the initial Age Related Eye Disease Study (A.R.E.D.S.)  to slow the progression of the mild form of macualr degeneration to the severe form. The supplements in the original formula are:

PRESERVISION
Vitamin A (beta-carotene)
Vitamin C  (ascorbic acid )
Vitamin E (dl-Alpha Tocopheryl Acetate)
zinc oxide
copper cupric oxide

While a studies have shown an increase in lung cancer in smokers taking Vitamin A (beta-carotene) supplements, this is not a clear cut finding and may be proven wrong in the future. Currently supplements are being made both with and without Vitamin A. The exciting new news on the macular degeneration front is Age Related Eye Disease Study 2 -, which is testing the addition of lutein and zeaxanthin. Omega 3 fatty acids are also currently being looked at as a preventative supllements for macualr degeneration. Oxidative damage is presumably a major factor in macualr degeneration but it, like every other disease is usually not a simple one fix all type of propostition. Focusing on lifestlye prevention and nutrition and not late miracle  cures should be a large part of our research expenditures.

It is still incredibly important to remember that many cases of all three of these conditions are due to genetic, environmental,coexisting health conditions, social, and mental health conditions out of our hands; and to place the blame or burden on an individual for their own illness is one of the cruelest and narcissistic attitudes we can take. On the other hand, we are enterning a new era where we can offer new forms of advice and interventions at an early age.

Glaucoma is at an earlier stage where we know less. While we will address individuals supplements and conditions in laters articles, for now a few peices of the clue. Vitamin C  loweres eye pressure in some people due to osmotic pressure.  Ginko may increase blood flow to the optice nerve. Forskolin comes from a plant named Coleus forskohlii and it has been  used to lower intraocular pressure.

You can alter your lifestlye and nutrition and in conjunction with your prevetative eye exams from your family eye doctor thier is a good chance you can expect a lifetime of healthy eyesight. Fortunatly, most vision insurance plans, including Vision Service Plan and Medicare are recognizing the need for annual eye check ups for theses diseases.

As a final note, we feel so strongly about preventing blindness, if you have lost your job the last 12 months and are unisured we will work with you to manage your glaucoama for free for the remaider of the year if we feel we can help your case.

The National Eye Institute does love it’s acronyms. CATT is one of the more recent ones-the comparison of AMD Treatments Trials. Translated that means there is going to be a study on the two drugs already being widely used to treat macular degeneration, one of the top leading causes of blindness.

Lucentis was actually approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration  in June of 2006 for the treatment of advanced macular degeneration based on clinical studies. Avastin is a drug similar to Lucentis not approved for use in the eye but it has become the treatment of choice in many offices due to the feeling  that it is more efficacious and requires less frequent injections. This is more than a minor consideration since many people have a high level of fear for injections involving their eye and less frequent injections may translate to much higher compliance with treatment schedules. Lucentis and Avastin are both made by Genentech, Inc.

Macular degeneration is at an epidemic proportion with over 2 million Americans visually compromised. It is unfortunate that the clinical trials are coming after the drug has entered the mainstream, hopefully in the future we can have a voluntary mechanism to help translate off label use of drugs into the first layer of clinical trials when advantages become apparent early on as they have in this case.

Neither drug should be looked at as a miracle cure. Mostly there has been a slowing of progression of the wet form of macular degeneration and a small improvement in vision in about a third of the patients. Time will tell whether there is a real or perceived difference between the two drugs.

Annual preventative eye health check ups with your eye doctor are vital to early detection and treatment of conditions like macular degeneration, glaucoma, and cataracts.

Computer Eye Exam Fort Collins

Computer Eye Exam Fort Collins Eye Doctor

This is a short video of what an autorefractor does when it determines your eyeglasses or contact lens prescription. It is abstract but you can see the infrared beam and changing focus as the eye computer analyzes the wavefront from the optical system of your eye.  The final determination tells us the amount of nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism you have. The cross pattern is the infrared beam that you will not see when the instrument is measuring, however it evidently has enough visible red light to show up on video. The circular pattern of lines are the image you will see and watch as amazingly it clears and comes into a crisp focus as the autorefractor works away with it’s complex algorithm. This technology greatly enhances our ability to determine your prescription with pinpoint accuracy.