Is there a role for the immune system in glaucomatous optic neuropathy?
- 1 April 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Current Opinion in Opthalmology
- Vol. 11 (2) , 145-150
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00055735-200004000-00014
Abstract
Glaucoma and immunity are not traditionally perceived as being causally related. Recently, however, compelling observations have provided insight into a potential role for the immune system in the development of glaucomatous optic neuropathy. In this article, it is proposed that the role of the immune system in glaucoma is two-fold. In some patients, there is evidence that an autoimmune mechanism may be responsible for eliciting damage to the optic nerve, resulting in glaucomatous injury. Autoimmune damage to the optic nerve may occur directly by autoantibodies, or indirectly by way of a “mimicked” autoimmune response to a sensitizing antigen which, in turn, injurs retinal ganglion cells. We suggest that autoimmune-mediated glaucoma injury occurs most often, but not exclusively, in patients in whom the intraocular pressure has never been found to be elevated. A second role of the immune system in glaucoma is likely one of surveillance, in which signal pathways of the immune system regulate cell death in response to conditions that stress retinal neurons in glaucoma. These might include mechanical stress from high intraocular pressure, ischemia, excessive excitatory amino acids, or toxic products resulting from excessive nitric oxide synthase production in either neurons or glial fibers that surround the optic nerve as it exits the eye. In these cases, we propose that the immune system acts as an “arbiter” to help determine whether a neuronal cell will ultimately survive, or succumb to, those stressors that are perceived as injurious. It is conceivable that such surveillance and cell death regulation by the immune system is important in determining the fate of retinal neurons in both the more common “high-pressure” forms of glaucoma, such as primary open-angle glaucoma, and in cases in which the intraocular pressure appears within normal range.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Serum Autoantibodies to Optic Nerve Head Glycosaminoglycans in Patients With GlaucomaArchives of Ophthalmology (1950), 1999
- Caspases: Enemies WithinScience, 1998
- Clinical and Ocular Histopathological Findings in a Patient With Normal-Pressure GlaucomaArchives of Ophthalmology (1950), 1998
- Neuropathies Associated with ParaproteinemiaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1998
- Anti-Ro/SS-a positivity and heat shock protein antibodies in patients with normal-pressure glaucomaAmerican Journal of Ophthalmology, 1998
- To Die or Not to DieJAMA, 1998
- TUNEL-Positive Ganglion Cells in Human Primary Open-angle GlaucomaArchives of Ophthalmology (1950), 1997
- Increased Incidence of Paraproteinemia and Autoantibodies in Patients With Normal-pressure GlaucomaAmerican Journal of Ophthalmology, 1994
- Heat-shock proteins: Immunity and autoimmunityCurrent Opinion in Immunology, 1992
- Immune-Related Disease and Normal-Tension GlaucomaArchives of Ophthalmology (1950), 1992