Acta ophthalmologica
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To assess the lumbar cerebrospinal fluid pressure (CSF-P) in ocular hypertensive subjects with elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) but without development of glaucomatous optic nerve damage. ⋯ Some ocular hypertensive subjects with increased intraocular pressure measurements (after correction for their dependence on central corneal thickness) had an abnormally high lumbar cerebrospinal fluid pressure. Assuming that lumbar cerebrospinal fluid pressure correlated with orbital cerebrospinal fluid pressure, one may postulate that the elevated retro-lamina cribrosa pressure compensated for an increased intraocular pressure. The elevated retro-lamina cribrosa pressure may have led to a normal trans-laminar pressure difference in the eyes with elevated intraocular pressure, so that glaucomatous optic nerve damage did not develop. Intraocular pressure, cerebrospinal fluid pressure and arterial blood pressure were correlated with each other.