ROLE OF CAMERAL MUCOUS GEL IN PRIMARY NARROW-ANGLE AND CLOSED ANGLE GLAUCOMA - A PATHOGENIC CLUE

Citation
Fj. Carreras et F. Gonzalezcaballero, ROLE OF CAMERAL MUCOUS GEL IN PRIMARY NARROW-ANGLE AND CLOSED ANGLE GLAUCOMA - A PATHOGENIC CLUE, Eye, 9, 1995, pp. 619-623
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Ophthalmology
Journal title
EyeACNP
ISSN journal
0950222X
Volume
9
Year of publication
1995
Part
5
Pages
619 - 623
Database
ISI
SICI code
0950-222X(1995)9:<619:ROCMGI>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
The cameral mucous gel (CMG) has been described as a layer of glycopro tein-enriched hyaluronic acid lining the anterior surface of the iris, covering the trabecular meshwork, and spreading over the posterior su rface of the cornea. The CMG is thought to exert a colloid-osmotic eff ect on the hydrostatic forces involved in the circulation of the aqueo us humour which may help our understanding of the pathophysiology of o pen angle and angle closure glaucomas. The CMG was precipitated in two normal human eyes, one with an artificially shortened anterior chambe r and the other with an open chamber. In the eye with a narrow angle, the CMG was seen to fill the iridocorneal gap completely, blocking acc ess to the trabecular meshwork from the central anterior chamber. The CMG may be implicated in the pathogeny of narrow angle and closed angl e glaucoma. The two types of glaucoma may share a common mechanism dep ending on the thickness of the layer of CMG that precedes the exit pat hways. Pretrabecular CMG thickness is a decisive determinant of the co lloid-osmotic resistance of the gel to aqueous outflow, and this thick ness is governed by, among other factors, the position of the iris rel ative to the posterior surface of the cornea. The formation of a thick layer of CMG in the narrow chamber angle prevents the normal anterior chamber pressure from exerting a backward displacement effect on the peripheral iris. Unopposed posterior chamber pressure may therefore fo rce the peripheral iris forward, making angle closure likely.