PACG Basics - Eye Under Pressure
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Mechanisms & Stages - The Closure Story
- Mechanisms:
- Pupillary Block (>90%): Relative (lens-iris apposition) or absolute (posterior synechiae) → iris bombé → iridotrabecular contact (ITC).
- Plateau Iris: Anterior ciliary processes push peripheral iris into angle. "Double hump sign".
- Lens-induced: Phacomorphic, subluxation.
- Malignant Glaucoma: Posterior aqueous misdirection.
- Stages (ISGEO Classification):
- PACS: ≥180° ITC; normal IOP, no PAS, no optic disc damage.
- PAC: PACS criteria + (PAS or ↑IOP); no glaucomatous optic neuropathy (GON).
⭐ Pupillary block is the predominant mechanism in over 90% of Primary Angle Closure cases.
- PACG: PAC criteria + GON.
- Acute Angle Closure Crisis (AACG): Sudden, severe IOP ↑; pain, blurred vision (corneal edema), halos, nausea.

Symptoms & Signs - Spotting the Attack
- Acute Angle-Closure Crisis (Ophthalmic Emergency):
- Symptoms:
- Sudden, severe unilateral ocular pain, may radiate.
- Blurred vision ("steamy"), halos around lights.
- Nausea, vomiting (oculocardiac reflex).
- Headache, photophobia.
- Signs:
- IOP markedly ↑ (often > 40-50 mmHg).
- Ciliary flush (circumcorneal injection).
- Corneal edema (hazy cornea).
- Shallow anterior chamber (AC).
- Pupil: mid-dilated, fixed or sluggishly reactive, often vertically oval.
- Gonioscopy: Confirms closed angle (e.g., Shaffer Grade 0).

- Symptoms:
- Intermittent (Subacute) Angle Closure:
- Transient blurred vision, halos (e.g., in dim light, movies).
- Mild eye ache or frontal headache.
- Symptoms resolve spontaneously (e.g., sleep, bright light).
⭐ The classic triad of acute angle-closure crisis includes severe ocular pain, blurred vision with halos around lights, and nausea/vomiting.
Diagnosis & Management - Opening the Gates
-
Diagnosis:
- Gonioscopy: Gold standard (ITC, PAS).
- UBM/AS-OCT: Angle/ciliary body imaging.
-
Management Goal: ↓IOP, open angle, prevent ON damage.
-
Acute Attack:
- Medical:
- Topical: Timolol 0.5%, Apraclonidine 1%, Pilocarpine 2% (post-IOP drop).
- Systemic: Acetazolamide 500mg, Mannitol 1-2 g/kg IV.
- Laser:
⭐ Laser Peripheral Iridotomy (LPI) is the definitive first-line treatment for eyes with pupillary block mechanism in PAC Suspect, PAC, and PACG.
- Acute Management Steps:
- Medical:
-
Chronic/Post-LPI:
- Topical IOP-lowering meds.
- ALPI (plateau iris).
- Lens extraction/Trabeculectomy (if needed).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Pupillary block is the most common mechanism in PACG.
- Risk factors: hypermetropia, female, older age, Asian ethnicity.
- Acute attack: sudden painful red eye, halos, nausea, mid-dilated fixed pupil, ↑↑IOP.
- Gonioscopy confirms occludable angles, essential for diagnosis.
- Acute treatment: Medical (IV mannitol, acetazolamide, pilocarpine) then Laser Peripheral Iridotomy (LPI).
- LPI is the definitive treatment for pupillary block PACG.
- Chronic PACG is often asymptomatic with progressive optic nerve damage.
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