Skip to content
Apex Nursing

Chart — Med-Surg

Glaucoma vs Cataracts Comparison

Both cloud the aging eye, but they differ on every axis that matters: what’s damaged, which vision goes first, whether it hurts, and — crucially — whether it can be reversed. One is fixed by surgery; the other is a race to preserve what remains.

Educational use only. For study and pattern recognition; diagnosis and treatment of eye disease are provider-directed. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Side by Side

FeatureGlaucomaCataracts
What it isOptic nerve damage, usually from elevated intraocular pressureClouding of the lens
Vision loss patternPeripheral first (tunnel vision); central spared until lateGeneralized blurring, glare, halos, faded colors
PainNone in open-angle; severe in acute angle-closureNone
OnsetGradual (open-angle) or sudden (angle-closure)Gradual over months to years
Reversible?No — vision lost is permanent; treatment preserves what remainsYes — surgery restores vision
TreatmentPressure-lowering drops/lifelong therapy; laser/surgery; emergency care for angle-closureElective surgical lens replacement (intraocular lens)
Nursing emphasisDrop adherence, punctal occlusion, recognize the emergency, low-vision safetyPre/post-op teaching, activity restrictions, report increasing pain or vision loss

Don’t Miss the Emergency

Most glaucoma is the silent open-angle kind, but acute angle-closure glaucoma is a sight-threatening emergency: a sudden, severely painful red eye with halos around lights, blurred vision, a fixed mid-dilated pupil, and often nausea and vomiting. It needs immediate treatment to lower pressure — within hours — to prevent permanent blindness. A cataract never does this; sudden pain and redness always point away from cataract and toward emergency.

NCLEX Pearls

  • Glaucoma takes peripheral vision first and is irreversible; cataracts blur central vision and are surgically reversible.
  • Painless = open-angle glaucoma or cataract; sudden painful red eye with halos = acute angle-closure emergency.
  • Glaucoma care = lifelong drops + adherence; cataract care = surgical teaching + activity restrictions.
  • After cataract surgery, increasing pain or decreasing vision is never normal — report it.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses (AMSN) · Current medical-surgical nursing standards. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →