Outpatient Therapies Physicians Special Programs Patient Conditions Rehabilitation Orthopaedics

 
 

Kernan Hospital

Home > Medical Reference > Encyclopedia (English)

Toggle: English / Spanish

Ask Our Experts

Get answers to your specific medical questions from Kernan Hospital experts.

Note: This is for informational purposes only. Doctors cannot provide a diagnosis via e-mail.

 

Related Content

Kernan Hospital

Our Services

Patient Success Stories

Our Doctors

Optic nerve atrophy - Overview

Alternative Names

Second cranial nerve atrophy

Definition of Optic nerve atrophy:

Optic nerve atrophy involves tissue death of the nerve that carries the information of vision from the eye to the brain.

Causes, incidence, and risk factors:

There are many unrelated causes of optic atrophy. The most common cause is poor blood flow, called ischemic optic neuropathy, which most often affects the elderly. The optic nerve can also be damaged by shock, various toxic substances, radiation, and trauma.

Various eye diseases, most commonly glaucoma, can also cause optic nerve atrophy. In addition, the condition can be caused by diseases of the brain and central nervous system, such as cranial arteritis (sometimes called temporal arteritis), multiple sclerosis, brain tumor, and stroke.

There are also several rare forms of hereditary optic nerve atrophy that affect children and young adults.

  • Reviewed last on: 9/1/2006
  • Manju Subramanian, MD, Assistant Professor in Ophthalmology, Vitreoretinal Disease and Surgery, Boston University Eye Associates, Boston, MA. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.
Physicians Special Programs Patient Conditions Physical Therapy