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MD Pharmacology NMC syllabus Full notes Recent advances last updated on 2026-06-22

Ocular Pharmacology & Glaucoma

Ocular Drug Delivery, Aqueous Humour Dynamics & the Pharmacotherapy of Glaucoma

Past RGUHS + MPMSU + VNSGU · 7 RGUHSNov '19 RGUHSMay '19 MPMSUMay '18 VNSGUMay '17 RGUHSNov '16 RGUHSMay '11 MPMSU2011

Ocular Pharmacology & Glaucoma

1. Functional anatomy relevant to ocular drug delivery

Figure 1 — Drug sites of action
Figure 1 — Drug sites of action
Figure 2 — Topical drug absorption pathways
Figure 2 — Topical drug absorption pathways
  • The eye is a specialized sensory organ relatively secluded from systemic access by the blood–retinal, blood–aqueous, and blood–vitreous barriers, giving it unusual pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties (G&G 14e Ch.74, p.1453).
  • Extraocular structures — eyelids, orbit (bony cavity with fissures/foramina conducting nerves, muscles, vessels), Tenon's capsule, adipose tissue, and six extraocular muscles; the retrobulbar region lies immediately behind the globe. Knowledge of this anatomy underlies safe periocular drug delivery (subconjunctival, sub-Tenon, peribulbar, retrobulbar injections) (G&G 14e Ch.74, p.1453).
  • Conjunctiva — vascularized mucous membrane; the inferior fornix (inferior cul-de-sac) is where topical medications are usually placed (G&G 14e Ch.74, p.1453).
  • Lacrimal system — secretory (main lacrimal gland + accessory conjunctival glands) and excretory (puncta → canaliculi → lacrimal sac → nasolacrimal duct → nasal cavity) elements; lacrimal gland is autonomically innervated (parasympathetic secretomotor) (G&G 14e Ch.74, p.1453).
    • Anticholinergic drugs (tricyclic antidepressants, antihistamines, antiparkinsonian drugs) can produce dry-eye symptoms by blocking parasympathetic lacrimal secretion (G&G 14e Ch.74, p.1453).
  • Tear film is trilaminar: anterior lipid layer (meibomian glands); middle aqueous layer (~98% of tear film; main + accessory lacrimal glands); posterior mucin layer (conjunctival goblet cells, adherent to corneal epithelium) (G&G 14e Ch.74, p.1453).
  • The nasal cavity is lined by highly vascular mucosa; topical ophthalmic drugs reaching it via the nasolacrimal system gain direct systemic access, bypassing hepatic first-pass metabolism — basis of systemic side effects from eye drops (G&G 14e Ch.74, p.1453).
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Ocular Pharmacology Glaucoma

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