Why Acute Canine Glaucoma Is A Vision-Saving Emergency
Canine glaucoma is elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) damaging the retina and optic nerve. It causes pain and blindness. The critical concept:
In acute primary glaucoma, vision can be lost within HOURS at IOP >40 mmHg. Every hour matters. Prompt IOP reduction can save vision; delay typically means permanent blindness in the affected eye.
This calculator scores cardinal signs, intraocular pressure, and breed predisposition to identify dogs needing urgent ophthalmic assessment.
The Five Cardinal Signs
Any combination of these should prompt urgent IOP measurement:
1. Red Eye
Episcleral injection — the scleral blood vessels become dilated and visible from sustained high pressure stretching them.
2. Corneal Oedema
Cloudy, blue, or hazy cornea — the corneal endothelium fails under sustained high pressure, allowing fluid into the corneal stroma. The eye looks “milky” or “bluish”.
3. Fixed Dilated Pupil (Mydriasis)
Pupil dilated and non-responsive to light. This is the opposite of uveitis (which causes pupillary constriction — miosis). Pupil-size asymmetry is highly suggestive of glaucoma when combined with other signs.
4. Visible Eye Pain
Squinting (blepharospasm), rubbing the eye against furniture, head-shy behaviour, reluctance to be touched near the face, generalised lethargy.
5. Vision Loss
Bumping into things, reluctance to navigate, not responding to hand gestures, not following a tossed cotton ball in the visual cone of the affected eye.
Additional Concerning Signs
- Buphthalmos — visibly enlarged eyeball (advanced chronic glaucoma; the cornea and sclera have stretched under sustained pressure)
- Excessive tearing
- Photophobia — reluctance to face bright light
- Lens displacement — visible subluxation or luxation (secondary cause in Terriers, Shar Pei)
The Two Main Categories Of Canine Glaucoma
Primary Glaucoma
Hereditary — abnormal drainage angle anatomy. Bilateral in most breeds but typically presents acutely in one eye first. The second eye usually affected within months to 2 years without prophylactic treatment — making contralateral eye prophylaxis critical.
Secondary Glaucoma
Elevated IOP from another eye condition:
- Lens luxation — Jack Russell, Fox Terrier (smooth and wire), Lakeland Terrier, Welsh Terrier, Tibetan Terrier, Shar Pei classic
- Uveitis — anterior uveitis can obstruct outflow
- Intraocular tumour — masses obstructing aqueous flow
- Intraocular bleeding (hyphaema) — blood clots blocking outflow
- Congenital abnormalities
Definitive Diagnosis – Tonometry
Intraocular pressure (IOP) measurement is the diagnostic step. Three main tonometer types:
TonoVet (Rebound Tonometer)
- Quick, no anaesthesia needed
- Accurate, widely used in general practice
- Multiple readings averaged for accuracy
TonoPen (Applanation)
- Accurate
- Requires topical anaesthesia
Schiotz Tonometer
- Older indentation method
- Still used in some practices
Reference Ranges (Canine)
| IOP (mmHg) | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| 15-25 | Normal |
| >25 | Borderline elevated |
| >30 | Elevated – glaucoma |
| >40 | CRITICAL – vision-saving emergency |
Breed Predispositions For Primary Glaucoma
The breeds most over-represented:
- Cocker Spaniel (American and English) — very high risk; primary glaucoma classic
- Basset Hound
- Bouvier des Flandres
- Beagle
- Welsh Springer Spaniel
- Siberian Husky
- Chow Chow
- Akita
- Norwegian Elkhound
- Miniature Poodle / Toy Poodle
For owners of these breeds, annual IOP screening from age 4-5 identifies pre-clinical disease in some cases.
Breeds Predisposed To Lens-Luxation Secondary Glaucoma
Terrier breeds are over-represented for primary lens luxation:
- Jack Russell Terrier — classic
- Fox Terrier (Smooth and Wire)
- Lakeland Terrier
- Welsh Terrier
- Tibetan Terrier
- Sealyham Terrier
And:
- Chinese Shar Pei
Bilateral disease in 60-90% of affected dogs. Primary lens luxation is hereditary (autosomal recessive in many Terrier breeds — DNA testing available).
Emergency Treatment – The First Hours
When acute glaucoma is diagnosed at IOP >40 mmHg, time matters more than anything else:
Acute IOP Reduction
- IV mannitol 1-2 g/kg over 15-20 min — osmotic agent; rapid pressure reduction
- Topical drops — multiple agents simultaneously
- Anterior chamber paracentesis — sometimes performed for emergency pressure relief
Topical Agents
- Prostaglandin analogues (latanoprost 0.005%, travoprost) — most effective single-agent; increase uveoscleral outflow
- Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (dorzolamide 2%, brinzolamide 1%) — reduce aqueous production
- Beta-blockers (timolol 0.5%) — reduce aqueous production
- Combinations — e.g. Cosopt (dorzolamide + timolol)
Oral Agents
- Methazolamide (carbonic anhydrase inhibitor)
Multi-Drug Combination
Canine primary glaucoma is more refractory than human glaucoma. Multi-drug combinations are usually needed — often prostaglandin analogue + CAI + beta-blocker all topically, plus oral CAI if needed.
The Contralateral Eye – The Critical Intervention
When one eye develops primary glaucoma, the second eye almost always follows within months to 2 years unless treated prophylactically.
Prophylactic Treatment
Topical drops in the unaffected eye delay second-eye disease substantially:
- Prostaglandin analogue (latanoprost 0.005% q12-24h)
- Demecarium bromide (in some markets)
Published studies: mean time to second-eye glaucoma extends from ~8 months without prophylaxis to ~30 months with prophylaxis.
This is a sight-saving intervention worth committing to. Even if the first eye is already lost, protecting the second eye is the priority.
Surgical Options
For medically refractory cases:
Laser Cyclophotocoagulation
Diode laser to ciliary body — reduces aqueous production. Commonly used. Sometimes combined with gonio-implant.
Gonio-Implant (Ahmed Valve, Baerveldt)
Creates artificial drainage path. Specialist procedure.
Lens Extraction
For lens-luxation-induced glaucoma — removes the displaced lens, restoring outflow. Best outcomes when performed early.
End-Stage Options (Blind Painful Eye)
Chronic glaucoma in a blind eye is painful. Medical management may be inadequate. End-stage options:
- Enucleation — surgical removal of the eye
- Evisceration + intraocular silicone prosthesis — removes the eye contents, leaves the sclera with a silicone ball inside; cosmetically better than enucleation; many owners prefer this option
Both substantially improve quality of life when medical management has failed.
Differentials For Red Painful Eye
Glaucoma is one of several conditions causing red painful eye. Vet examination differentiates:
| Condition | Distinguishing features |
|---|---|
| Glaucoma | Elevated IOP, dilated pupil, corneal oedema, vision loss |
| Anterior uveitis | LOW IOP, MIOTIC (small) pupil, aqueous flare, normal or low IOP |
| Corneal ulcer | Focal corneal defect, fluorescein-positive, normal IOP |
| Conjunctivitis | Usually less painful, no corneal oedema, normal pupil |
| Dry eye (KCS) | Schirmer tear test diagnoses, sticky discharge, normal IOP |
| Foreign body | Acute onset, focal irritation, sometimes visible |
Pupil response and IOP measurement are the two most useful single tests to differentiate glaucoma from uveitis (which can also present with red painful eye).
Honest Caveats
- IOP measurement is the diagnostic step — clinical signs alone are not sufficient; some glaucoma cases have subtle signs.
- Acute glaucoma is a vision-saving emergency — same-hour vet visit for IOP >40 mmHg or new acute signs.
- Contralateral eye prophylaxis is critical in primary glaucoma — don’t focus only on the affected eye.
- Chronic glaucoma in a blind eye is painful — medical management or surgery offers important quality of life improvements.
- DNA testing available for primary lens luxation in some Terrier breeds — useful for breeders.
Conclusion
Canine glaucoma is elevated intraocular pressure damaging the retina and optic nerve — causing pain and blindness. Acute glaucoma is a vision-saving emergency where vision can be lost within hours at IOP >40 mmHg. The five cardinal signs — red eye, corneal oedema, fixed dilated pupil, visible pain, vision loss — should prompt urgent IOP measurement. Breed predisposition is strong for primary glaucoma (Cocker, Basset, Bouvier, Beagle, Husky, Chow) and secondary lens-luxation glaucoma (Terriers, Shar Pei). Contralateral eye prophylaxis in primary glaucoma extends mean time to second-eye disease from ~8 to ~30 months — a sight-saving intervention. Definitive diagnosis is tonometry (normal canine IOP 15-25 mmHg).
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the signs of glaucoma in dogs?
The five CARDINAL SIGNS that should prompt urgent IOP measurement: (1) RED EYE – episcleral injection from sustained high-pressure scleral vessel stretching; (2) CORNEAL OEDEMA – cloudy, blue, or hazy cornea; (3) FIXED DILATED PUPIL not responsive to light (opposite of uveitis which has small pupil); (4) VISIBLE EYE PAIN – squinting, rubbing, head-shy; (5) VISION LOSS – bumping into things, not responding to gestures. Additional signs: BUPHTHALMOS (visibly enlarged eyeball – advanced chronic), excessive tearing, photophobia.
How is glaucoma diagnosed in dogs?
DEFINITIVE DIAGNOSIS requires INTRAOCULAR PRESSURE MEASUREMENT by TONOMETRY. Three main types: TonoVet (rebound tonometer – quick, no anaesthesia needed, widely used in general practice); TonoPen (applanation – accurate, requires topical anaesthesia); Schiotz tonometer (older indentation method). Reference: normal canine IOP 15-25 mmHg; >25 borderline; >30 elevated glaucoma; >40 CRITICAL vision-saving emergency. Additional workup: ophthalmic examination, pupillary reflexes, fundus exam, gonioscopy (drainage angle assessment).
Is glaucoma in dogs an emergency?
Acute glaucoma with high IOP IS a VISION-SAVING EMERGENCY. Vision can be lost within HOURS at IOP >40 mmHg – every hour matters. SAME-HOUR VET VISIT for acute red painful eye with vision compromise or visible cardinal signs. Treatment: IV mannitol for rapid IOP reduction; intensive topical drops (prostaglandin analogue + carbonic anhydrase inhibitor + beta-blocker); possible anterior chamber paracentesis. Chronic glaucoma in a blind eye is still painful and warrants attention but is not vision-saving.
Which dog breeds get glaucoma most often?
PRIMARY GLAUCOMA breeds: Cocker Spaniel (American and English – very high risk, classic), Basset Hound, Bouvier des Flandres, Beagle, Welsh Springer Spaniel, Siberian Husky, Chow Chow, Akita, Norwegian Elkhound, Miniature Poodle, Toy Poodle. SECONDARY GLAUCOMA from LENS LUXATION: Terrier breeds especially – Jack Russell Terrier (classic), Fox Terrier (Smooth and Wire), Lakeland Terrier, Welsh Terrier, Tibetan Terrier, Sealyham Terrier; also Chinese Shar Pei. DNA testing available for primary lens luxation in some Terrier breeds.
Can dog glaucoma be cured?
Glaucoma cannot be cured but can be managed. Acute IOP reduction can save vision if treated within hours of onset. Chronic management uses topical drops (prostaglandin analogues like latanoprost, carbonic anhydrase inhibitors like dorzolamide, beta-blockers like timolol) and sometimes oral methazolamide. Canine primary glaucoma is MORE REFRACTORY than human glaucoma – multi-drug combinations often needed. Surgical options include laser cyclophotocoagulation, gonio-implant valves, lens extraction for lens-luxation cases. End-stage blind painful eye: enucleation or evisceration + intraocular prosthesis substantially improves quality of life.
Why is the second eye important in dog glaucoma?
PRIMARY GLAUCOMA is BILATERAL in most breeds – it typically presents acutely in ONE eye first, but the SECOND EYE almost always follows within MONTHS TO 2 YEARS without prophylactic treatment. CONTRALATERAL EYE PROPHYLAXIS with TOPICAL DROPS (typically prostaglandin analogue like latanoprost 0.005% q12-24h or demecarium bromide) DELAYS SECOND-EYE DISEASE SUBSTANTIALLY – published studies show mean time to second-eye glaucoma extends from ~8 months without prophylaxis to ~30 months with. This is a sight-saving intervention worth committing to – even if the first eye is already lost, protecting the second eye is the priority.
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References & Further Reading
The dosing ranges and safety information on this page are drawn from the following veterinary references. Always defer to your own veterinarian and the manufacturer’s label for your specific product.
- Gelatt KN, Gilger BC, Kern TJ (eds). Veterinary Ophthalmology, 5th ed. Wiley-Blackwell – canine glaucoma chapters.
- Komaromy AM, Bras D, Esson DW, et al. The future of canine glaucoma therapy. Veterinary Ophthalmology, 2019.
- Miller PE, Bentley E. Clinical signs and diagnosis of the canine primary glaucomas. Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 2015.
- Strom AR, Hassig M, Iburg TM, Spiess BM. Epidemiology of canine glaucoma presented to University of Zurich. Veterinary Ophthalmology, 2011.
- American College of Veterinary Ophthalmologists (ACVO). Genetics committee breed disposition lists.
- Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook – canine ophthalmic medications.
- PuppaDogs. Quality of Life Calculator and Pain Score Calculator for Dogs. puppadogs.com.
















