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Diabetic
Eye Health |
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What
is Diabetes?
How does Diabetes affect the eyes and my vision?
How will I know if I have eye damage from Diabetes?
What
can I do to limit the eye damage caused by Diabetes?
I've just been diagnosed with Diabetes. What are
the odds I will develop retinopathy?
Does the presence of diabetic retinopathy always
require treatment?
How is clinically significant diabetic retinopathy
treated?
I have diabetes. How often do I need to visit my
eye doctor?
| What
is Diabetes? |
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Diabetes is a medical condition resulting when the pancreas
slows down or stops secreting insulin. This prevents the body
from using and storing sugar properly. High blood-sugar levels
can eventually damage blood vessels (capillaries) throughout
the body that supply the eyes, kidneys, heart, nerves and skin.
Clinically
there are two types of diabetes:
Type I diabetes, also known as juvenile or insulin-dependent
diabetes, occurs when the pancreas no longer manufactures
insulin. Treatment of this condition usually requires daily
administration of insulin.
Type II diabetes, also known as adult-onset or non
insulin-dependent diabetes, occurs when insulin does not function
properly in the body. Treatment of this condition usually
requires oral medication taken daily.
| How
does Diabetes affect the eyes and my vision? |
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This condition can weaken the small blood vessels
of the retina,
resulting in leakage of fluid or blood (background retinopathy)
or in production of abnormal blood vessels (proliferative
retinopathy). These blood vessels can break and produce rapid
visual loss because the vitreous
(normally transparent) fills with blood, blocking the transmission
of light to the retina.
| How
will I know if I have eye damage from Diabetes? |
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Retinopathy causes no eye pain. Typically a diabetic patient
has few warning signs until late in the disease process. There
is often no vision loss until the retinopathy is advanced.
Since these early signs of eye damage are "silent" a dilated
eye examination by your eye doctor is the ONLY way to detect
these ocular complications.
| What
can I do to limit the eye damage caused by Diabetes? |
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The best treatment is to prevent or restrict the development
of retinopathy. Strict control of your blood sugar and treatment
of high blood pressure and kidney problems, if present, may
significantly reduce, but not eliminate, your long-term risk
of developing sight-threatening retinal damage. Your family
doctor can help advise you.
| I've
just been diagnosed with Diabetes. What are the odds I
will develop retinopathy? |
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Fifty (50) percent of diabetics develop at least some degree
of ocular involvement after seven (7) years.
| Does
the presence of diabetic retinopathy always require treatment? |
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No. The presence of mild diabetic retinopathy that does not
threaten visual function may not require treatment but will
need to be followed closely to detect any progression. Only
some diabetics with retinopathy will eventually develop more
serious retinal complications that require treatment.
| How
is clinically significant diabetic retinopathy treated? |
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Laser surgery to the retina can frequently prevent further
progression and can even reverse certain types of retinopathy.
The presence of blood within the eye may require surgery (vitrectomy)
for removal.
| I
have diabetes. How often do I need to visit my eye doctor? |
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Early detection is the best protection against
visual loss from diabetes. For this reason, patients with
diabetes should have eye examinations at least once a year.
Those patients with documented retinal changes may need to
be followed more often depending on their severity.
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