Glaucoma poses a serious and increasing problem for public health as it is the leading cause of irreversible blindness and significant reductions in quality of life [
1]. Glaucoma is a group of progressive optic neuropathies characterized by a degeneration of retinal ganglion cells and retinal nerve fiber layers that result in changes in the optical nerve head, leading to visual field loss and eventual blindness [
2]. Risk factors include age and frailty, gender, myopia, genetics, family history, smoking, race, systemic hypotension and hypertension, vasospasm, use of systemic or topical steroids, migraine, obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, and most significantly, increased intraocular pressure (IOP) [
3]. Although the primary strategy for managing glaucoma is based on pharmacological or surgical interventions, other factors such as diet, exercise, or sleeping position should also be considered to reduce the progression of this disease and avoid symptoms (e.g., visual field loss) [
2]. Therefore, physical activity needs to be carefully and individually prescribed to induce positive instead of adverse effects on ocular physiology depending on the type of exercise and participants’ characteristics.
A primary exercise intervention for muscle and strength development is resistance training [
4]. Regular resistance training provides several benefits for the human body such as improving body composition, glycemic control, cardiovascular health, increasing bone mineral density, facilitating physical functions, and enhancing mental health [
5]. Therefore, this type of physical activity is readily practiced by populations of all ages and is recommended as a part of the World Health Organization 2020 guidelines [
6]. This also applies to the elderly, who can effectively counteract or reverse the aging process with resistance training [
7]. This type of training can be accomplished using bodyweight, resistance bands, free weights, or weight machines. Resistance bands and bodyweight training may provide an alternative when traditional weight equipment is unavailable. However, determining the appropriate training intensity and maintaining progression over time, as well as achieving high involvement of particular lower body muscles are more challenging with these forms [
8]. Therefore, free weight and weight machine training should be prioritized and for optimal benefits, the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) recommends 1−3 sets per exercise of 8−12 repetitions with 70−85% of one repetition maximum (1RM) for novice and 3−6 sets of 1−12 repetitions with 70−100% 1RM for advanced trainees [
9]. However, for many populations, the above-mentioned training demands while recovering from injuries or undergoing rehabilitation and dealing with different forms of chronic inflammation and pain (e.g., arthritis) may make adherence to this recommendation challenging. Moreover, it may be potentially harmful to glaucoma patients, especially given that people over 60 years of age are at an increased risk of glaucoma and have to counteract the progressive loss of muscle mass and strength with age [
10].
Even though resistance training offers a variety of positive health effects, it has been hypothesized that high-intensity resistance training may cause acute increases in IOP [
11,
12,
13,
14], which is a substantial risk factor for the onset of glaucomatous optic nerve injury [
15]. Therefore, resistance training following ACSM guidelines may be harmful to patients with or at risk of glaucoma. According to the available data, increases in IOP after high-intensity resistance training vary on the exercise and load applied, with heavier loads and exercises involving several muscle groups showing the greatest alterations [
14,
16,
17]. This phenomenon may be related to core stability or bracing during high-intensity exercise that is achieved by trunk muscle contraction and often results in a Valsalva maneuver [
18]. Consequently, the increases in intra-abdominal and intrathoracic pressures are transmitted to systemic vascular and intracranial transmural pressures [
19], affecting IOP. In addition, body positioning during exercise also influences IOP levels, with greater IOP values in supine than sitting or standing [
20]. This creates significant limitations in terms of designing and progressing resistance training programs, especially in at-risk patients beginning a resistance training program. However, it is also worth noting that the IOP response is reduced in trained individuals, indicating that fitness levels may modulate this phenomenon [
13]. Hence, this may be related to several adaptive processes which accompany regular resistance training, highlighting the importance of considering training status to prevent/reduce undesirable effects on ocular health and gradual progression models recommended by the ACSM.
Considering the above, an appropriate solution for glaucoma patients or those at risk of glaucoma may involve the combination of resistance training and blood flow restriction (BFR). This training solution involves the use of an inflatable cuff, tourniquet, or elastic wraps that exert high pressure at the proximal part of the limb (lower or upper), to reduce arterial blood flow and to occlude venous blood flow during physical exercise. Resistance training loads with BFR exercise are reduced due to increased metabolic stress [
21], cell swelling [
22], intramuscular signaling [
23], and enhanced endocrine system responses from the reduction of arterial inflow to the exercising limb [
24]. Hence, while maintaining similar effectiveness to high-intensity resistance training in terms of muscle mass and strength [
25], an adjunctive benefit of BFR exercise may be a potential reduction of IOP secondary to reduced training loads (20–30% 1RM).