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White Coat Syndrome for Eye Pressure

White Coat Syndrome for Eye PressureI have strong evidence that I exhibit a white coat syndrome for intraocular pressure (eye pressure). First, let me provide some background on white coat syndrome.

White coat hypertension (or white coat syndrome) is defined as a situation where patients have high blood pressure in the doctor's office but normal pressure at home (or in similar situations where they are comfortable). Patients with white coat hypertension will often have occasional episodes of high blood pressure under situations other than the physician's office. However, their blood pressure is reliably high when taken in the physician's office and it is reliably low when taken at home.

I have found that my eye pressure exhibits this behavior exactly. (And it is funny that my blood pressure does not!)

I usually measure my eye pressure many times per day at home with my Reichert AT555 tonometer. Today I measured my eye pressure throughout the day, as usual, and it averaged about 12 mmHg. Just before my eye doctor appointment I measured my eye pressure again. It was 13.0 in my right eye and 12.0 in my left eye.

Then I left for my appointment and I took my tonometer from my house to my doctor’s office. At the doctor’s office, we measured my IOP six times using both a Goldman applanation tonometer and my AT555 side by side. The Goldman tonometry was done by the doctor. I did the AT555 measurements exactly like I do at home. My doctor observed all my AT555 measurements.

In short, my eye pressure (right eye) went from 13 at home (immediately before leaving) to 20 in the doctor’s office and then back to 12 when I returned home. The entire series of measurements is shown below with times and instruments noted.

Location            Time                  Eye Pressure                           Tonometer

Home                2:18 PM            13.0 OD and 12.0 OS                  AT555

Dr. P Office        3:05 PM            20.3 OD and 18.7 OS                  AT555

Dr. P Office        3:10 PM            20 OD and 18 OS                       GAT

Dr. P Office        3:12 PM            17.3 OD and 15.3 OS                  AT555

Dr. P Office        3:14 PM            18 OD and 16 OS                       GAT

Dr. P Office        3:30 PM            18 OD and 16 OS                       GAT

Dr. P Office        3:42 PM            20.7 OD and 18.0 OS                  AT555

Home                5:07 PM            11.7 OD and 11.3 OS                  AT555

Note that this is one more validation that my tonometer reads almost exactly the same as Goldman applanation tonometry (GAT). I’ve done similar comparisons half a dozen times before and my tonometer has always been in agreement with GAT. Furthermore, there is published research validating the close agreement between these tonometers.

However, the more interesting result of this little experiment is the fact that my eye pressure was nearly double in the physician's office. My eye pressure is reliably low at home (around 13 mmHg) and reliably high (around 20 mmHg or more) in any doctor's office. To my knowledge, a case of white coat syndrome for intraocular pressure has never been published previously. However, I do know some other people who can measure their own eye pressure with professional quality tonometers and their own experience mirrors mine. 


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Posted Apr 24 2007, 06:33 PM by Dave

Comments

gail.smith-kopitowski wrote re: this is just great for the nerve...
on 05-09-2007 5:16 PM

Hello Dave,

I was diagnosed with Glaucoma about 3 years ago and have since been using different eye drops.  Right now I use two: Trusopt - 1 drop every 12 hours in both eyes and Xalacom 1 drop every morning in both eyes. I also take an ACE blocker for blood pressure.  Because my eye pressure was always above the 20 mark (I could have a bit of white coat syndrome), I had the laser surgery in both eyes in March 07 and after 6-7 weeks, the check-up showed that my eye pressure was still elevated.  There is a 2nd laser surgery scheduled for June 07.  I am 51 years old and I hear that sometimes laser does not work properly on younger people.  What is your take on this?

Dave wrote re: this is just great for the nerve...
on 05-09-2007 6:12 PM

Hi Gail,

I don't know a lot about surgery. Have you visited the glaucoma group on Yahoo? Here is the link: http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/glaucoma/

There are many people on that group with excellent knowledge of glaucoma surgery, including Dr. Ritch.

At FitEyes.com I try to keep the focus more on lifestyle, diet, herbs, vitamins and all the alternatives to surgery. In that regard, I think your comments about your IOP are interesting. It might be worthwhile to find out if you do indeed have a bit of white coat syndrome for IOP and utilize that knowledge to help you make the right decision about another surgery.

Good luck and please keep me informed about your progress.

gail.smith-kopitowski wrote re: White Coat Syndrome for Eye Pressure
on 05-10-2007 7:38 AM

Hi Dave,

Thanks for your comments.  In Canada, we have a great health system - free medical assistance so when laser was recommended, I did it without hesitating.  My focus, however, is to find other alternatives- diet, herbs, vitamins, etc.  I read in one of your blogs that fish oil was good so I am going to try taking the salmon oil capsules.  The comments in your blog are very interesting and I look forward to reading more.

Thanks for your comments.

Dave wrote re: White Coat Syndrome for Eye Pressure
on 05-10-2007 9:12 AM

Gail, for DHA and omega 3 EFA intake I'm using cod liver oil, Neuromins DHA, spirulina, flax seeds and I am considering adding krill oil. I wrote a recent post about krill oil here:

http://fiteyes.com/blogs/fiteyes/2007/04/23/Krill-Oil-Benefits-for-Vision-Better-Than-Fish-Oil

And even though I am a "vegetarian" I actually eat salmon fairly regularly. Here at the ARVO (Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology) conference I have eaten salmon every day for lunch.

Thanks for your compliments on my blog!

The IOP Querent wrote White Coat Ocular Hypertension In One Eye
on 06-03-2007 6:08 PM

White coat hypertension (or white coat syndrome) is a widely recognized blood pressure phenomenon. However,

Dave wrote re: White Coat Syndrome for Eye Pressure
on 06-02-2008 3:32 PM

From my inbox:

Comment: "Here's another interesting thought.  Elevated eye pressures at the doctor's could be due to the anesthetic and fluorescein (eye coloring) as well.  Only way to know is to do the AT555 tests before getting any eye drops.  curious to see if you had done that. "

Reply: Yes, I have tested for this effect in several different ways at several different times. One of the best tests was having my doctor perform Goldmann applanation tonometry (GAT) completely without anesthesia.

My doctor has such excellent tonometer skills that I routinely have him check my intraocular pressure using GAT without any anesthesia.

There are some published research studies on this topic and if my memory is correct, the anesthesia and/or fluorescein have been found to have small effects on IOP in some conditions.

However, in my tests these eye drops did not have any material effect on my intraocular pressure. They certainly are not the cause of the elevated IOP I experience when under stress or at the doctor's office. I can say that with complete confidence.

The IOP Querent wrote Revolutionize Your Glaucoma Management
on 06-15-2008 5:01 PM

Dear Glaucoma Patient, Welcome to FitEyes.com ! I am Dave and I founded FitEyes.com two years ago. This

jaytee wrote re: White Coat Syndrome for Eye Pressure
on 08-05-2008 1:35 AM

very interesting. I must say I do not think I exhibit this syndrome, but will keep this in mind during my doctor visits. My Reichert and Goldman are fairly well coordinated too.

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