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Effect of age-stiffening tissues and intraocular pressure on optic nerve damages.
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2012
Year
HypertensionOcular DiseaseAgingOcular Surface PhysiologyGlaucomatous DamagesOptic NerveLongevityNeurologyMechanobiologyGlaucomatous Nerve DamagesOphthalmologyIntraocular PressureEye HealthExperimental OphthalmologyMild HypertensionPhysiologyOptic Nerve DamagesGlaucomaMedicineAge-stiffening TissuesVascular Aging
Age-stiffening of ocular tissues is statistically linked to glaucoma in the elderly. In this study, the effects of age-stiffening on the lamina cribrosa, the primary site of glaucomatous nerve damages, were modeled using computational finite element analysis. We showed that glaucomatous nerve damages and peripheral vision loss behavior can be phenomenologically modeled by shear-based damage criterion. Using this damage criterion, the potential vision loss for 30 years old with mild hypertension of 25 mmHg intraocular pressure (IOP) was estimated to be 4%. When the IOP was elevated to 35 mmHg, the potential vision loss rose to 45%; and age-stiffening from 35 to 60 years old increased the potential vision loss to 52%. These results showed that while IOP plays a central role in glaucomatous damages, age-stiffening facilitates glaucomatous damages and may be the principal factor that resulted in a higher rate of glaucoma in the elderly than the general population.