Everyone is at risk for glaucoma. However, certain groups are at higher risk than others. People at high risk for glaucoma should get a complete eye exam, including eye dilation, every one or two years. The following are groups at higher risk for developing glaucoma. 

People Over Sixty

Glaucoma is much more common among older people. You are six times more likely to get glaucoma if you are over sixty years old.

Family Members with Glaucoma

The most common type of glaucoma, primary open-angle glaucoma, is hereditary. If members of your immediate family have glaucoma, you are at a much higher risk than the rest of the population. Family history increases risk of glaucoma four to nine times. 

Steroid Users

Some evidence links steroid use to glaucoma. A Ninety Ninety Seven study reported in the Journal of American Medical Association demonstrated a forty percent increase in the incidence of ocular hypertension and open-angle glaucoma in adults who require approximately fourteen to thirty five puffs of steroid inhaler to control asthma. This is a very high dose, only required in cases of severe asthma.

Eye Injury

Injury to the eye may cause secondary open-angle glaucoma. This type of glaucoma can occur immediately after the injury or years later. Blunt injuries that “bruise” the eye (called blunt trauma) or injuries that penetrate the eye can damage the eye’s drainage system, leading to traumatic glaucoma. The most common cause is sports-related injuries such as baseball or boxing.