CHICAGO—Prevent Blindness, an eye health and safety nonprofit, has declared November 18-24, 2024, as its fifth annual “Thyroid Eye Disease (TED) Awareness Week.” TED, also known as Graves’ Eye Disease or Graves’ ophthalmopathy, is an autoimmune disease in which the immune system causes inflammation and swelling, and stimulates the production of muscle tissue and fat behind the eye. This year’s TED Awareness Week is supported by Amgen, Immunovant, Inc., Tourmaline Bio, Inc. and Viridian Therapeutics, according to the announcement.

According to the organization, symptoms of TED include: bulging eyes (proptosis) dry, gritty and irritated eyes, red eyes, puffy eyelids, sensitivity to light and watery eyes. In more advanced cases of TED, patients may also experience trouble moving eyes and fully closing eyelids, corneal ulcers caused by an inability to completely close eyelids, colors that appear to be dull or not as bright, blurred or loss of vision due to optic nerve compression or corneal damage.

A recent study found that patients with TED are more likely to develop depression and anxiety. They may also feel reduced self-confidence, a decreased desire to socialize with others, and difficulties with productivity at school or work. Prevent Blindness offers TED patients and others the Vision Loss and Mental Wellness resource from its Living Well With Low Vision program. The dedicated webpage offers tips to support mental health and links to mental health organizations.

To help educate patients, care partners, and health care professionals, Prevent Blindness provides a variety of free TED educational resources, including comprehensive fact sheets and social media graphics, available in English and Spanish, and a dedicated webpage. As part of its Focus on Eye Health Expert Series, Prevent Blindness also offers the following episodes:



“We are in an exciting time of offering hope and help to those with thyroid eye disease and their care partners, thanks to access to new treatment options and the development of new medications on the horizon,” said Jeff Todd, Prevent Blindness president and CEO. “Because TED often impacts vision and mental health, our goal is to provide the public, patients and care partners with information needed to understand and mitigate the effects of TED and help patients enjoy a high quality of life for years to come.”

For more information on TED, click here. For more information on low vision and resources, visit Living Well with Low Vision.

To view the full fact sheet from Prevent Blindness, click here.