There are many diseases in which extreme highs or lows in physiologic values—sudden spikes outside of a normal range—can cause damage to the body’s organs, and glaucoma appears to be one of these. In glaucoma, elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) eventually damages the optic nerve and leads to blindness, but not in any predictable way. Intraocular pressure seems to fluctuate in ways that vary greatly among individuals, perhaps spiking at different times of the day for different patients, and this makes both the diagnosis and the management of the disease challenging. "In the field of glaucoma, there are a lot of unknowns because we haven’t previously been able to continuously monitor intraocular pressure," says Jean-Marc Wismer, CEO of Swiss start-up Sensimed AG.
Sensimed was formed in 2003 to do just that. The young company is developing a sensor that would provide 24-hours worth of IOP data as an alternative to the point-by-point...
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