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carbonic anhydrase inhibitor

Pressure-Lowering Drug Class

Plain-language definition

Medications that reduce fluid production in the eye or brain. Used as eye drops (dorzolamide, brinzolamide) or pills (acetazolamide) for glaucoma and IIH.

Expanded explanation

carbonic anhydrase inhibitor is the glossary term for Pressure-Lowering Drug Class. On a full article page, it should be read as a medication term, not as a stand-alone diagnosis or treatment plan.

Medication terms identify a drug, drug class, or treatment ingredient. The useful context is why it is being used, how it is taken, what benefit is expected, and what safety issues need monitoring.

In eye care context

Medication terms describe drugs or drug classes that may be used in eye care, neurology, inflammation, infection, or pain treatment.

What to look for around this term

  • Whether the medication is being used for inflammation, infection, pressure control, pain, immune suppression, migraine, or another purpose.
  • The route of treatment, such as eye drop, pill, injection, infusion, ointment, or nasal spray.
  • Expected benefits, common side effects, contraindications, and follow-up monitoring.

Questions this term may raise

  • What problem is this medication treating?
  • How quickly should it help?
  • What side effects or interactions should be reviewed?
Category
Medication
Also written as
carbonic anhydrase inhibitors

Related glossary terms

A note on medical context

A glossary definition can explain a word, but it cannot tell you whether a symptom or test result is serious. If this term came from an article, use the full article and your clinician's guidance for context.