Diabetic Eye Disease
Diabetic eye disease
refers to a group of eye problems that people with
diabetes may face as a complication of this disease.
All can cause severe vision loss or even blindness.
Diabetic eye disease may include:
Diabetic
Retinopathy--damage to the blood vessels in the
retina.
Cataracts--clouding
of the eye's
lens.
Glaucoma--increase
in fluid
pressure inside the eye that leads to
optic
nerve damage and loss of vision.
Cataract and
glaucoma also affect many people who do not have
diabetes.
What is the most
common diabetic eye disease?
Diabetic
Retinopathy. This disease is a leading cause of
blindness in American adults. It is caused by
changes in the blood vessels of the retina. In some
people with diabetic retinopathy, retinal blood
vessels may swell and leak fluid. In other people,
abnormal new blood vessels grow on the surface of
the retina. These changes may result in vision loss
or blindness.
Who is most
likely to get diabetic retinopathy?
Anyone with
diabetes. The longer someone has diabetes, the more
likely he or she will get diabetic retinopathy.
Nearly half of all people with diabetes will develop
some degree of diabetic retinopathy during their
lifetime.
Symptoms
Often there are none
in the early stages of the disease.
Visual acuity may not
change until the disease becomes severe. Nor is
there any pain.
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Blurred
vision may occur when the
macula--the part
of the
retina that provides sharp, central
vision--swells from the leaking fluid. This
condition is called macular edema. If new
vessels have grown on the surface of the
retina, they can bleed into the eye,
blocking vision. But, even in more advanced
cases, the disease may progress a long way
without symptoms. That is why regular eye
examinations for people with diabetes are so
important.
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If you have
diabetes, you should have your eyes examined at
least once a year. Your eyes should be
dilated
during the exam. That means eyedrops are used to
enlarge your
pupils. This allows the eye care
professional to see more of the inside of your eyes
to check for signs of the disease.
Treatment
Your eye care
professional may suggest laser surgery in which a
strong light beam is aimed onto the retina to shrink
the abnormal vessels. Laser surgery has been proved
to reduce the risk of severe vision loss from this
type of diabetic retinopathy by 60 percent.
If you have macular
edema, laser surgery may also be used. In this case,
the laser beam is used to seal the leaking blood
vessels. However, laser surgery often cannot restore
vision that has already been lost. That is why
finding diabetic retinopathy early is the best way
to prevent vision loss.
Prevention
The Diabetes Control
and Complications Trial (DCCT) showed that better
control of blood sugar level slows the onset and
progression of retinopathy and lessens the need for
laser surgery for severe retinopathy.
The study found that
the group that tried to keep their blood sugar
levels as close to normal as possible had much less
eye, kidney, and nerve disease. This level of blood
sugar control may not be best for everyone,
including some elderly patients, children under 13,
or people with heart disease. So ask your doctor if
this program is right for you. Read more about
Diabetic
Retinopathy here.
How common are
the other diabetic eye diseases?
If you have
diabetes, you are also at risk for other diabetic
eye diseases. Studies show that you are twice as
likely to get a
cataract as a person who does not
have the disease. Also, cataracts develop at an
earlier age in people with diabetes. Cataracts can
usually be treated by surgery.
Glaucoma may also
become a problem. A person with diabetes is nearly
twice as likely to get glaucoma as other adults.
And, as with diabetic retinopathy, the longer you
have had diabetes, the greater your risk of getting
glaucoma. Glaucoma may be treated with medications,
laser, or other forms of surgery.
What research is
being done?
Much research is
being done to learn more about diabetic eye disease.
For instance, the National Eye Institute is
supporting a number of research studies in the
laboratory and with patients to learn what causes
diabetic retinopathy and how it can be better
treated. This research should provide better ways to
detect and treat diabetic eye disease and prevent
blindness in more people with diabetes.
What can you do
to protect your vision?
Finding and treating
the disease early, before it causes vision loss or
blindness, is the best way to control diabetic eye
disease. So, if you have diabetes, make sure you get
a dilated eye examination at least once a year.
Some Info, courtesy of the National Eye Institute
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