You
may have heard that diabetes causes eye problems and may lead to blindness.
People with diabetes do have a higher risk of blindness than people without
diabetes. But most people who have diabetes have nothing more than minor eye
disorders.
With
regular checkups, you can keep minor problems minor. And if you do develop a major problem, there are
treatments that often work well if you begin them right away.
Eye Insight
To
understand what happens in eye disorders, it helps to understand how the eye
works. The eye is a ball covered with a tough outer membrane. The covering in
front is clear and curved. This curved area is the cornea, which focuses light
while protecting the eye.
After
light passes through the cornea, it travels through a space called the anterior
chamber (which is filled with a protective fluid called the aqueous humor),
through the pupil (which is a hole in the iris, the colored part of the eye),
and then through a lens that performs more focusing. Finally, light passes
through another fluid-filled chamber in the center of the eye (the vitreous)
and strikes the back of the eye, the retina.
The
retina records the images focused on it and converts those images into
electrical signals, which the brain receives and decodes.
One
part of the retina is specialized for seeing fine detail. This tiny area of
extra-sharp vision is called the macula. Blood vessels in
and behind the retina nourish the macula.
Glaucoma
People
with diabetes are 40% more likely to suffer from glaucoma than people without
diabetes. The longer someone has had diabetes, the more common glaucoma is. Risk also increases with age.
Glaucoma
occurs when pressure builds up in the eye. In most cases, the pressure causes
drainage of the aqueous humor to slow down so that it builds up in the anterior
chamber. The pressure pinches the blood vessels that carry blood to the retina
and optic nerve. Vision is gradually lost because the retina and nerve are
damaged.
There
are several treatments for glaucoma. Some use drugs to reduce pressure in the
eye, while others involve surgery.
Cataracts
Many
people without diabetes get cataracts, but people with diabetes are 60% more
likely to develop this eye condition. People with diabetes also tend to get
cataracts at a younger age and have them progress faster. With cataracts, the
eye's clear lens clouds, blocking light.
To
help deal with mild cataracts, you may need to wear sunglasses more often and
use glare-control lenses in your glasses. For cataracts that interfere greatly
with vision, doctors usually remove the lens of the eye. Sometimes the patient
gets a new transplanted lens. In people with diabetes, retinopathy can get worse after removal of the
lens, and glaucoma may start to develop.
Retinopathy
Diabetic
retinopathy is a general term for all disorders of the retina caused by
diabetes. There are two major types of retinopathy: nonproliferative and
proliferative.
Nonproliferative
retinopathy
In
nonproliferative retinopathy, the most common form of retinopathy, capillaries
in the back of the eye balloon and form pouches. Nonproliferative retinopathy
can move through three stages (mild, moderate, and severe), as more and more
blood vessels become blocked.
Macular edema
Although
retinopathy does not usually cause vision loss at this stage, the capillary walls may lose their ability to
control the passage of substances between the blood and the retina. Fluid can
leak into the part of the eye where focusing occurs, the macula. When the
macula swells with fluid, a condition called macula edema,
vision blurs and can be lost entirely. Although nonproliferative retinopathy
usually does not require treatment, macular edema must
be treated, but fortunately treatment is usually effective at stopping and
sometimes reversing vision loss.
Proliferative
retinopathy
In
some people, retinopathy progresses after several years to a more serious form
called proliferative
retinopathy. In this form, the blood vessels are so damaged they
close off. In response, new blood vessels start growing in the retina. These
new vessels are weak and can leak blood, blocking vision, which is a condition
called vitreous hemorrhage. The new blood vessels can also cause scar tissue to
grow. After the scar tissue shrinks, it can distort the retina or pull it out
of place, a condition called retinal detachment.
How is it Treated?
Huge
strides have been made in the treatment of diabetic retinopathy. Treatments such as scatter
photocoagulation, focal photocoagulation, and vitrectomy prevent blindness in most people. The
sooner retinopathy is diagnosed, the more likely these treatments will be
successful. The best results occur when sight is still normal.
In photocoagulation,
the eye care professional makes tiny burns on the retina with a special laser.
These burns seal the blood vessels and stop them from growing and leaking.
In
scatter photocoagulation (also called panretinal photocoagulation), the eye
care professional makes hundreds of burns in a polka-dot pattern on two or more
occasions. Scatter photocoagulation reduces the risk of blindness from vitreous
hemorrhage or detachment of the retina, but it only works before bleeding or
detachment has progressed very far. This treatment is also used for some kinds
of glaucoma.
Side
effects of scatter photocoagulation are usually minor. They include several
days of blurred vision after each treatment and possible loss of side
(peripheral) vision.
In
focal photocoagulation, the eye care professional aims the laser precisely at
leaking blood vessels in the macula. This procedure does not cure blurry vision
caused by macular edema. But it does keep it from getting worse.
When
the retina has already detached or a lot of blood has leaked into the eye,
photocoagulation is no longer useful. The next option is vitrectomy, which is
surgery to remove scar tissue and cloudy fluid from inside the eye. The earlier
the operation occurs, the more likely it is to be successful. When the goal of
the operation is to remove blood from the eye, it usually works. Reattaching a
retina to the eye is much harder and works in only about half the cases.
There
are two types of treatment for macular edema: focal laser therapy that slows
the leakage of fluid, and medications that can be injected into the eye that
slow the growth of new blood vessels and reduce the leakage of fluid into the
macula.
Am I at Risk for
Retinopathy?
Several
factors influence whether you get retinopathy:
·
blood sugar control
·
blood pressure levels
·
how long you have had diabetes
·
genes
The
longer you've had diabetes, the more likely you are to have retinopathy. Almost
everyone with type 1 diabetes will
eventually have nonproliferative retinopathy. And most people with type 2 diabetes will also get it. But the retinopathy
that destroys vision, proliferative retinopathy, is far less common.
People
who keep their blood sugar levels closer to normal are less likely to have
retinopathy or to have milder forms.
Your
retina can be badly damaged before you notice any change in vision. Most people
with nonproliferative retinopathy have no symptoms. Even with proliferative
retinopathy, the more dangerous form, people sometimes have no symptoms until
it is too late to treat them. For this reason, you should have your eyes
examined regularly by an eye care professional.
No comments:
Post a Comment