Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Head-down Yoga Postures Fatal For Glaucoma Patients: Study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2016 11:57 AM
    For people suffering from glaucoma, certain yoga positions - especially head-down postures - and other exercises like push-ups and lifting heavy weights may be dangerous, a team of US researchers has warned.
     
    Glaucoma patients may experience increased eye pressure as the result of performing several different head-down positions while practicing yoga, claimed the researchers from New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai (NYEE).
     
    Four inverted yoga positions - facing dog, standing forward bend, plow and legs up the wall - were key to the research.
     
    “While we encourage our patients to live active and healthy lifestyles, certain types of activities, including pushups and lifting heavy weights, should be avoided by glaucoma patients,” said Robert Ritch, senior study author and Director, Glaucoma Research, NYEE.
     
    Damage to the optic nerve occurs in glaucoma patients when fluid pressure inside the eye rises. Elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) is the most common known risk factor.
     
    Certain yoga postures and exercises increase “the risk of increasing IOP and possibly damaging the optic nerve," Ritch noted.
     
    In previous research, studies and case reports had tested only the headstand position which showed a marked two-fold rise in IOP.
     
    In the new study, researchers asked healthy participants with no eye-related disease and glaucoma patients to perform four inverted yoga positions.
     
    Both normal and glaucoma study participants showed a rise in IOP in all four yoga positions, with the greatest increase of pressure occurring during downward facing dog.
     
    When the measurements were taken after the participants returned to a seated position and again after waiting for 10 minutes, the pressure in most cases remained slightly elevated from the baseline.
     
    “As we know that any elevated IOP is the most important known risk factor for development and progression of nerve damage to the eye, the rise in IOP after assuming the yoga poses is of concern for glaucoma patients and their treating physicians,” explained study first author Jessica Jasien at NYEE.
     
    “In addition, glaucoma patients should share with their yoga instructors their disease to allow for modifications during the practice of yoga,” Jasien added.
     
    The research team emphasises the importance of educating glaucoma patients on all of the risks and benefits of relating to physical exercise and their overall vision health.
     
    “The new study will help clinicians advise their patients on the potential risk associated with various yoga positions and other exercises that involve inverted poses,” the authors concluded in a paper published in the journal PLOS ONE.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Why suicides peak between midnight and 4 a.m.

    Why suicides peak between midnight and 4 a.m.
    Apart from late-night parties, good night's sleep and some real action, the time between midnight to 4 a.m. is also known for another thing - suicide.

    Why suicides peak between midnight and 4 a.m.

    Anti-diabetic drug may slow aging too

    Anti-diabetic drug may slow aging too
    Keeping the years off your face may soon become a lot easier as researchers have now discovered new evidence that anti-diabetic drug metformin slows aging and increases lifespan.

    Anti-diabetic drug may slow aging too

    Stressed mothers may affect behaviour of the unborn

    Stressed mothers may affect behaviour of the unborn
    Stress during pregnancy can affect the baby in your womb in many ways as researchers have found that foetuses are more likely to show left-handed movements in the womb when their mothers are stressed.

    Stressed mothers may affect behaviour of the unborn

    Sperm-inspired microbots to deliver drugs

    Sperm-inspired microbots to deliver drugs
    Researchers, including an Indian-origin scientist, have developed sperm look-alike robots that can be used for drug delivery, in-vitro fertilisation (IVF), cell sorting and other applications at the microscopic level.

    Sperm-inspired microbots to deliver drugs

    Male contraceptive pill will have to wait

    Male contraceptive pill will have to wait
    The much speculated birth control pill for males may not see the light of day soon as researchers have found that hormonal male contraception via testosterone does not stop the production of healthy sperm.

    Male contraceptive pill will have to wait

    Exercise scores over diet in lowering breast cancer risk

    Exercise scores over diet in lowering breast cancer risk
    Are you on a strict diet to reduce body fat that may also help lower breast cancer risk? Better take up exercise as researchers have found that physical activity offers additional benefit, beyond the effect of weight loss in reducing cancer risk.

    Exercise scores over diet in lowering breast cancer risk