You probably know high blood pressure
and other vascular
diseases pose risks to overall
health, but you may not know that they can affect eyesight by damaging
the veins in the eye.
Central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO) blocks the main vein in the
retina, the light-sensitive nerve layer at the back of the eye.
The blockage causes the walls of the vein to leak blood and excess
fluid into the retina.
When this fluid collects in the macula-the area of the retina responsible
for central vision-vision becomes blurry.
Floaters in your vision are another symptom of CRVO. When retinal
blood vessels are not working properly, the retina grows new fragile
vessels that leak blood into the vitreous, the fluid that fills
the center of the eye. Blood in the vitreous clumps and is seen
as tiny dark spots, or floaters, in the field of vision.
In severe cases of CRVO, new blood vessels cause glaucoma
to develop. Retinal vein occlusions commonly occur with glaucoma,
diabetes, age-related vascular disease, high blood pressure, and
blood disorders.
The first step is finding what is causing the vein blockage. There
is no cure for CRVO. Your ophthalmologist may recommend a period
of observation, since hemorrhages and excess fluid often subside
on their own. Laser surgery may be effective in preventing further
bleeding into the vitreous, or for treating glaucoma, but it cannot
remove a hemorrhage or cure glaucoma
once it is present.