A Routine Eye Check and Glaucoma

A routine eye check may raise suspicion of glaucoma through elevated eye pressure, changes in the optic nerve, or unexplained vision changes. However, confirming glaucoma usually requires specialised tests such as optic nerve imaging, visual field testing, and corneal thickness measurement. Also, a routine for glasses is not a substitute for an eye exam, as the former can often miss glaucoma.

Glaucoma usually causes no pain, no redness, and no obvious vision change in its early stages. Most people with glaucoma feel completely normal until significant and irreversible damage has occurred. The only way to detect it early is a comprehensive eye examination that includes optic nerve assessment, intraocular pressure measurement, and visual field testing

A Routine Eye Check Revealed a Sight-Threatening Disease

Mrs SG came to see me because her glasses prescription had not felt right for a few months. She was 57. She worked at a desk. Her eyes were tired by evening, and she assumed she needed a stronger number. She had no pain. No redness. No alarming moment that made her think something was wrong.

Her previous optician had given her a new prescription six months earlier. It had not helped. She booked an appointment with me because a colleague had suggested a second opinion.

I examined her in the usual way. Her visual acuity was reasonable. Her anterior segment was quiet. Then I checked her retina and optic nerve.

The optic nerve in her left eye had a cup that was too large. The rim tissue was thinning at the inferior pole. Her intraocular pressure was 24 mmHg in the right eye and 26 in the left. I asked her to sit with the visual field machine.

The field test confirmed what the disc had suggested. There was a dense arcuate defect in her left eye. A significant portion of her peripheral vision was already gone. She had not noticed. You rarely do with glaucoma, because the brain fills in the gaps until it cannot.

She did not need a stronger glasses prescription. She had glaucoma, and it had been quietly advancing for what was likely several years.

Patient details have been changed to protect privacy.


Remember

Sunita’s case is not unusual. Glaucoma is called the silent thief of sight for a reason. It causes no pain, no visible redness, and no early warning that most patients would recognise. By the time vision loss is noticeable, the disease has already caused permanent damage. In India, an estimated 12 million people have glaucoma, and almost 90% of them do not know it. (The Chennai glaucoma Study).

Below, I explain what glaucoma actually does to the eye, why it is so reliably missed, and which symptoms, or absences of symptoms, should prompt an urgent examination.


What Glaucoma Actually Does to Your Eye

Glaucoma is a disease of the optic nerve. The optic nerve carries visual information from the eye to the brain. When this nerve is damaged, that information is lost permanently. No treatment can restore what is already gone. Treatment can only slow or stop further damage.

In most cases, the damage is caused or worsened by raised pressure inside the eye. This pressure, called intraocular pressure or IOP, builds when fluid inside the eye does not drain properly. The drainage system becomes less efficient over time, pressure rises, and the optic nerve fibres begin to die. The process is painless in the vast majority of patients.

What makes glaucoma particularly deceptive is the pattern of vision loss. It begins at the periphery, the edges of your visual field. The brain compensates automatically. Both eyes together create a complete picture, and each eye covers for the blind spots of the other. Patients often do not notice peripheral vision loss until more than 40 percent of their optic nerve fibres have already been destroyed. By that point, the disease is well advanced.

In SG’s case, her glasses prescription had changed slightly because her visual system was compensating for early field loss. It was not a refractive change. It was her brain working harder to make sense of incomplete information. This pattern, subtle visual dissatisfaction without a clear cause, is one of the most common presentations I see in patients who turn out to have early to moderate glaucoma.


Glaucoma vs Normal Ageing: How to Tell the Difference

Symptom or SignWhat It SuggestsWhat To Do
Gradual blurring that a new glasses prescription does not fixMay indicate optic nerve or macular pathology, not refractive changeSee an ophthalmologist for optic nerve assessment, not just a refraction
Difficulty adjusting from bright to dim lightCan be an early sign of peripheral field lossRequest a visual field test at your next eye appointment
Frequent glasses changes with no lasting improvementSuggests the problem is not the prescriptionAsk for intraocular pressure measurement and disc evaluation
Mild headache or eye heaviness without rednessIn some patients, mildly elevated IOP causes subtle discomfortCheck IOP, especially if over 40 or with family history of glaucoma
No symptoms at all, but a family member has glaucomaFirst-degree relatives have a 4 to 9 times higher riskSchedule a comprehensive glaucoma screening even if you feel completely well
Squinting or tilting the head to see clearlyMay indicate undetected visual field asymmetryFull field test for both eyes separately

Why Glaucoma Is So Often Missed

The most common reason glaucoma goes undetected is that a routine glasses check is not a glaucoma examination.

When a patient visits an optician or a basic eye clinic for a new prescription, the standard assessment measures visual acuity and refraction. It does not always include optic nerve photography, intraocular pressure measurement, or visual field testing. These are the three investigations that detect glaucoma. Without all three, the disease is invisible.

Sunita had seen an optician twice in three years. Her visual acuity was checked each time. Her optic nerve was never examined.

The second reason glaucoma is missed is the absence of symptoms. Patients present to doctors when something feels wrong. Glaucoma does not feel wrong, not for years. There is no cultural expectation in India of an annual comprehensive eye examination. Most people attend only when they need a new prescription or when something is visibly red or painful. By those criteria, a glaucoma patient has no reason to come at all.

The third reason is that IOP alone is not a reliable screening tool. Many patients with glaucoma have pressure in the so-called normal range. Normal-tension glaucoma accounts for a substantial proportion of cases, particularly in people of Asian descent. A single IOP reading of 16 mmHg does not exclude the diagnosis.

SG’s IOP was elevated, which made diagnosis more straightforward. But many of my patients with confirmed glaucoma have had pressures that would not have triggered concern at a routine check.


When To See an Eye Specialist

See an ophthalmologist for a comprehensive glaucoma assessment if any of the following apply:

  • A parent, sibling, or child has been diagnosed with glaucoma
  • You are over 40 and have not had a comprehensive eye examination in the past two years
  • You have been told your eye pressure is “a little high” but were not referred further
  • You have changed your glasses prescription twice in two years with no lasting improvement
  • You have diabetes, as this increases glaucoma risk
  • You are of South Asian, East Asian, or African descent, all of which carry higher glaucoma risk
  • You use steroid eye drops, nasal sprays, or inhalers long-term
  • You were told everything was fine, but your vision still does not feel right

A comprehensive assessment takes around 30 to 45 minutes and is painless. It will include optic nerve imaging, IOP measurement, corneal thickness assessment, and a visual field test. This combination reliably detects glaucoma at a stage when treatment can prevent significant vision loss.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can you have glaucoma with normal eye pressure?

Yes. Normal-tension glaucoma is a recognised and common form of the disease, particularly in people of Asian descent. A normal IOP reading does not rule out glaucoma; optic nerve assessment and visual field testing are essential.

Does glaucoma always cause pain?

No. The most common forms of glaucoma are completely painless. Pain is associated with acute angle-closure glaucoma, which is a sudden and rare presentation. Most patients with chronic open-angle glaucoma, the most prevalent type, feel nothing at all until vision loss is advanced.

Can lost vision from glaucoma be restored?

No. Optic nerve damage caused by glaucoma is permanent. Treatment with eye drops, laser, or surgery can slow or stop further damage, but vision already lost cannot be recovered. Early detection is the only way to protect useful sight.

How often should I have a glaucoma check if I have a family history?

If a first-degree relative has glaucoma, you should have a comprehensive eye examination every year from the age of 40, or earlier if your ophthalmologist advises it.


Book a Consultation

If you have a family history of glaucoma, have not had a comprehensive eye examination in the past two years, or have been told your eye pressure is elevated, a dedicated assessment is worth arranging now. The earlier glaucoma is found, the more vision can be protected.

At Dr Shibal Bhartiya Eye Clinic, Gurugram, a glaucoma assessment includes optic nerve imaging, visual field testing, corneal thickness measurement, and a full review of your risk profile. [second opinion]

[Book an Appointment → +91 88826 38735]


This page is a part of the Glaucoma Hub. you may want to read about Glaucoma Progression, and Risk Stratification in Glaucoma. Other articles of interest could be Advanced Glaucoma Care in Gurgaon, What Good Glaucoma Care Actually Optimises For, What Happens If Glaucoma Is Left Untreated?, More Glaucoma Eye Drops is Not Better Glaucoma Care, 5 Mistakes Patients Make in Glaucoma Care and Do You Really Need Treatment for Glaucoma?


About the Author

This article was written by Dr Shibal Bhartiya, fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator, Clinical Director at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram, known for ethical, patient-centred glaucoma care and independent glaucoma second opinions. She is also the Program Director for Community Outreach & Wellness; and for the Marengo Asia International Institute of Neuro and Spine.

She has published peer-reviewed research on glaucoma management, examining how treatment decisions should balance medical evidence, patient preferences, and long-term vision outcomes.

As Editor-in-Chief of Clinical and Experimental Vision and Eye Research and Executive Editor of the Journal of Current Glaucoma Practice (Pubmed Indexed, official journal of the International Society of Glaucoma Surgery), Dr Shibal Bhartiya brings editorial and research depth to every clinical decision. Her 200+ publications, including 90+ PubMed-indexed publications and 28 edited textbooks span glaucoma biology, surgical outcomes, health equity, and emerging diagnostics.

1500+ Five Star Patient Reviews Google Business Profile

If you are unable to come to Dr Bhartiya’s clinic: Read more about teleconsultation

Read her research on PubMed | Google Scholar | ResearchGate | ORCID

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Glaucoma and the Silent Warning Symptoms

Early Glaucoma Has No Symptoms. So How Do You Know You Have It? Dr Shibal Bhartiya explains who is at…

Services

Dr Shibal Bhartiya offers glaucoma diagnosis and treatment, second opinions, dry eye, neuro-ophthalmology, paediatric eye care, and specialist consultations at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Sector 56, Gurgaon.

She is a fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator with over 25 years of experience. Her focus is on identifying risk before damage becomes irreversible, simplifying treatment decisions, and protecting vision long-term. She is rated 5 stars across 1,500+ patient reviews on Google.


Glaucoma Care

Most patients who see Dr Bhartiya for glaucoma are either newly diagnosed and uncertain what to do next, or have been on treatment for years and are not sure it is working. Both are valid reasons to be here.


Specialist Consultations

These are services for patients with specific clinical questions — often patients who have been elsewhere and want a focused, expert assessment.

  • Eye evaluation before GLP-1 agonists (Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro): screening for retinal and optic nerve risk before starting or continuing GLP-1 medications. Dr Bhartiya has published a systematic review on GLP-1 agonists and the eye (PubMed indexed, 2025).
  • Online glaucoma consultation and second opinion: remote consultation for glaucoma, optic nerve concerns, and complex eye conditions, for patients outside Gurgaon and Faridabad
  • Second opinion for complex eye conditions: before any eye surgery, for unexplained vision changes, or when you want clarity before committing to a treatment plan
  • Pre-surgical counselling: understanding options, risks, and benefits before cataract, glaucoma, or refractive surgery
  • Guidance for chronic eye conditions: long-term support and realistic planning for patients managing glaucoma, dry eye, or other ongoing conditions

Ocular Surface Diseases

Screen time, pollution, and contact lens use are driving a quiet epidemic of surface eye disease. Many patients have been told their eyes are “normal” when the problem is simply being missed.


Neuro-ophthalmology

Symptoms like sudden vision loss, double vision, drooping eyelid, or unexplained headache with eye pain often sit at the boundary of neurology and ophthalmology. Dr Bhartiya sees these cases directly.


Paediatric Ophthalmology

Children rarely complain about their vision — they simply adapt. A missed refractive error or lazy eye can affect learning, confidence, and development for years.


Comprehensive Eye Health


Not Sure About Your Diagnosis? You Are Not Alone.

Many patients arrive after a diagnosis elsewhere — unsure whether to start treatment, concerned about long-term progression, or wanting clarity before committing to a plan. A second opinion is not a sign of distrust. It is good medicine.

Request a Glaucoma Second Opinion →


Where to Find Us

Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurgaon Golf Course Ext Rd, Sushant Lok II, Sector 56, Gurugram 122011 Appointments: +91 88826 38735 | 1800 309 4444 | +91 98187 00269

Teleconsultation is available for patients outside Gurgaon. Dr Bhartiya is happy to work in partnership with your local eye doctor over time.

Full contact details and directions →


Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a referral to see Dr Bhartiya?

No. You can book directly by calling +91 88826 38735. A referral is welcome if you have one, but it is not required.

Can I get a second opinion if I already have a diagnosis elsewhere?

Yes, this is one of the most common reasons patients come. Bring any reports, scans, or prescriptions you have. You can also upload them in advance for a structured review before your appointment.

What should I bring for my first appointment?

Previous prescriptions, glasses, eye drop bottles if you use them, and any imaging or investigation reports. Full guidance is on the What to Bring page.

Is teleconsultation available?

Yes. Patients outside Gurgaon and Faridabad can consult remotely. Call +91 88826 38735 to arrange.

How long does a glaucoma evaluation take?

A comprehensive glaucoma evaluation including visual fields and imaging typically takes 1.5 to 2 hours. Please plan accordingly.

Does Dr Bhartiya see children?

Yes. Paediatric eye exams, squint, amblyopia, and myopia control are part of regular practice.

I am on Ozempic or a GLP-1 medication. Should I get my eyes checked?

Yes. Emerging research links GLP-1 agonists with retinal and optic nerve changes in some patients. Dr Bhartiya offers a dedicated pre- and on-treatment eye evaluation. Read the published research


About Dr Shibal Bhartiya

Dr Shibal Bhartiya is a fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator with over 25 years of experience. Her approach focuses on identifying risk before damage is irreversible, simplifying treatment decisions, and protecting vision long-term.

She is Clinical Director of Ophthalmology at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram, Editor-in-Chief of Clinical and Experimental Vision and Eye Research, and Executive Editor of the Journal of Current Glaucoma Practice, PubMed-indexed, official journal of the International Society of Glaucoma Surgery.

Her 200+ publications, including 90+ PubMed-indexed papers and 28 edited textbooks, span glaucoma biology, surgical outcomes, health equity, and emerging diagnostics.

Her work is accessible on PubMed, Google Scholar, ResearchGate, and ORCID.

Full doctor profile → Patient testimonials → Leave a Google review → Upload your reports for a structured review →

Second Opinion | Teleconsultation Online

For patients who live elsewhere, Dr Bhartiya is happy to work in partnership with your local eye doctor to guide and support your care over time.