Swelling of the optic nerve due to increased intracranial pressure
Aetiology
- Caused by raised intracranial pressure
- The ICP is the sum of the brain, blood and CSF
- The sum must remain constant - increase in one variable will result in a decrease of one/both other variables (Monro-Kellie hypothesis) as cranium is rigid and cannot expand
Space-occupying lesion
- When a mass expands within the skull, compensatory mechanisms initially maintain a normal intracranial pressure
- Eventually further small increments in volume produce larger and larger increments in intracranial pressure
- Further increases in volume cause blood vessels to be compressed, ultimately causing global brain ischaemia/swelling with herniation through foramen magnum, brainstem compression and death
Problems with cerebral blood flow
- e.g. malignant hypertension - mechanism behind disc swelling poorly understood but may involve leakage and ischaemia of arterioles supplying optic disc, leading to swelling/haemorrhage around disc
Problems with CSF
- Obstruction to CSF circulation e.g. due to congenital malformation
- Overproduction of CSF e.g. due to a tumour
- Inadequate absorption e.g. due to haemorrhage
Idiopathic intracranial hypertension
- Common cause of bilateral disc swelling in young females
- Mechanism of disc swelling not fully understood but theories suggest obstruction of CSF circulation or impairment of absorption
Pathophysiology
- Optic nerve is extension of the brain (with meningeal sheaths)
- Subarachnoid space around optic nerve is continuous with the subarachnoid space surrounding the brain
- When intracranial pressure rises, this is transmitted to the subarachnoid space and then onto the optic nerve
- This causes interruption of axoplasmic flow and venous congestion → swollen discs
Clinical presentation
- Headache
- Enlarged blind spot, blurring of vision, visual obscurations and loss of vision
- N+V, especially if ICP rise is acute
Investigations
Fundoscopy
- Disc swelling (blurring)

Management
- Treat underlying cause
Complications
- Chronic papilloedema can cause axon damage leading to optic atrophy → loss of visual function occurs and blindness may result