Quote:
Originally Posted by BioBased
FYI I am posting this so you might avoid what happened to me. About two years ago during an eye exam I was told I had glaucoma, so the doctor prescribed drops. I found it hard to believe, because all my previous pressure readings were low, but my doctor dismissed my concern that the one high reading was because I drank mucho coffee before the exam. I ended up using the prescribed drops----until CRPS intervened and I was too ill to deal with getting another prescription for the drops.
When I visited the eye doctor yesterday I was caffeine free and my eye pressure was normal. She wanted to attribute the low reading to the drops, but I had not used them for over a year. This time she accepted that caffeine caused the anomalous reading, no glaucoma.
Research on the net confirms that caffeine can cause high ocular pressure. Avoid caffeine before having an ocular pressure test.
|
I have been diagnosed with narrow angle glaucoma. Maybe my coffee drinking before my eye appt. has mis-led my eye doc. I will NOT drink coffee before my next appt. and see if my pressures are better. I do not dispute the narrow angles or the elevated pressure, just wonder how much of the elevation is attributable to the coffee. My eye appts. always seem to be in the morning, right after I have loaded up with coffee in order to get me up and out.
Thanks for the info.