Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2718296 | The American Journal of Medicine | 2016 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Glaucoma is the most commonly acquired optic neuropathy. It represents a public health challenge because it causes an irreversible blindness. Emerging evidence indicates that the pathogenesis of glaucoma depends on several interacting pathogenetic mechanisms, which include mechanical effects by an increased intraocular pressure, decreased neutrophine-supply, hypoxia, excitotoxicity, oxidative stress, and the involvement of autoimmune processes. In particular, alterations in serum antibody profiles have been described. However, it is still unclear whether the autoantibodies seen in glaucoma are an epiphenomenon or causative. Oxidative stress appears to be a critical factor in the neurodestructive consequences of mitochondrial dysfunction, glial activation response, and uncontrolled activity of the immune system during glaucomatous neurodegeneration. In addition, hearing loss has been identified in association with glaucoma. A higher prevalence of antiphosphatidylserine antibodies of the immunoglobulin G class was seen in normal-tension glaucoma patients with hearing loss in comparison with normal-tension glaucoma patients with normacusis. This finding suggests a similar pathological pathway as a sign for generalized disease.
Keywords
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Medicine and Dentistry
Medicine and Dentistry (General)
Authors
Antonio MD, Maria Ida MD, Armando MD, Andrea MD, Massimo MD, Marco MD,