Cerebrospinal fluid drainage-glaucoma link
Professor Neeru Gupta. Photo Yuri Markarov

Cerebrospinal fluid drainage-glaucoma link

January 31, 2019 Staff reporters

University of Toronto researchers have shown that fluid which flushes out the eye’s optic nerve doesn’t flow properly in mice with glaucoma, one of the world’s leading causes of permanent blindness.

The researchers, ophthalmology professors Neeru Gupta and Yeni Yucel, and student Emily Mathieu,recently found cerebrospinal fluid from the brain penetrates the optic nerve, rather than simply surrounding it. Now, the team says it has discovered that in mice with glaucoma, far less of this fluid enters the optic nerve than in mice without glaucoma.

“This casts an entirely new light on glaucoma,” said Gupta. “If fluid is not getting into a nerve and that fluid exchange - good things getting in, bad things getting out - is disrupted, maybe that's part of the reason the optic nerve is damaged in glaucoma.”

She and Yucel discovered nearly a decade ago that the eye has a lymphatic system, which clears fluid and waste out of tissues. The inability to clear fluid from the eye causes a build-up of pressure, and pressure is a major risk factor for glaucoma.

“There's much more to this disease than we would like to think,” Gupta says. “Right now, we are able to tackle pressure in the eye that's measureable. If we can drop it, we slow progression. It's not a cure.”

“Now that we know there’s a problem, we need to drill down to understand the elements of it. It may even explain space flight-associated neuro-ocular syndrome (optic nerve fluid shifts and vision impairment suffered by astronauts in space missions)” says Yucel.

Next, the team will explore why the flow is disrupted and what impact this has on the optic nerve.

“I see many people who are slowly losing their sight from glaucoma,” says Gupta. “This discovery potentially offers new hope. As long as we keep looking, there’s hope for a better future for our glaucoma patients.”