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ARTICLE |

Hypertension, Perfusion Pressure, and Primary Open-angle Glaucoma:  A Population-Based Assessment

James M. Tielsch, PhD; Joanne Katz, ScD; Alfred Sommer, MD, MHSc; Harry A. Quigley, MD; Jonathan C. Javitt, MD, MPH
Arch Ophthalmol. 1995;113(2):216-221. doi:10.1001/archopht.1995.01100020100038.
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Objective:  To evaluate the association of vascular factors with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG).

Design:  A population-based prevalence survey of ocular disease among black and white residents.

Setting:  Communities of east Baltimore, Md.

Participants:  A stratified cluster sample of 5308 residents 40 years of age or older.

Main Outcome Measures:  Primary open-angle glaucoma as defined by demonstrable glaucomatous optic nerve damage based on visual fields and/or optic disc findings. Intraocular pressure level was not a criterion for diagnosis.

Results:  Systolic and diastolic blood pressure showed modest, positive association with POAG. The effect of blood pressure on POAG was modified by age, with a stronger association among older subjects. Lower perfusion pressure (blood pressure-intraocular pressure) was strongly associated with an increased prevalence of POAG, with a sixfold excess for those in the lowest category of perfusion pressure.

Conclusion:  These results suggest that POAG is associated with an alteration in factors related to ocular blood flow and a breakdown of autoregulation.

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