Reversible increase of intraocular pressure in subclinical hypothyroid patients.

OBJECTIVE The aim of the study was to analyse the relationship between the ocular parameters, namely intraocular pressure (IOP), and the early forms of subclinical hypothyroidism. DESIGN Fifty-three subjects (9 male and 44 female) aged from 18 to 45 years (mean 32 +/- 7 years) were selected for this study. Twenty-nine met the criteria of subclinical hypothyroidism and 24 euthyroid subjects, age- and sex-matched, were used as controls. METHODS All individuals underwent a complete ocular examination, including visual field examination and serial measurement of IOP by means of a Goldmann tonometer. A tonographic examination was also performed. RESULTS The hypothyroid patients showed a substantially higher pressure in both eyes compared with control subjects (right eye = 17.52 +/- 4.74 vs 13.42 +/- 1.95 mmHg, P < 0.0001; left eye = 17.55 +/- 3.99 vs 13.71 +/- 1.55 mmHg, P < 0.0001). Indeed, the tonometric pressure exceeded 18 mmHg in 11 out of the 29 (38%) patients in the right eye and in 8 out of 29 (27%) patients in the left eye. The outflow index was normal in all subjects except in two hypothyroid patients. After two months of L-thyroxine (L-T4) replacement therapy, only one patient continued to show tonometric values above 18 mmHg and the hypothyroid patients showed a significant reduction in mean IOP in both eyes compared with pre-treatment values (right eye = 14.96 +/- 1.32 mmHg, P < 0.0097; left eye = 15.03 +/- 1.38 mmHg, P < 0.0018). Treatment did not lead to any change in the outflow indices; however, the C value (outflow coefficient at the sclerocorneal corner) returned to normal in the two patients with increased pre-treatment tonographic values. CONCLUSIONS These findings indicate that the intraocular pressure is increased even in subclinical hypothyroid patients and that, at this early stage, the impairment is fully reversible with L-T4 therapy.