Diabetic Eye Disease
Diabetic Eye
Disease Can Cause Blindness
If you have diabetes, annual eye exams are crucial to early
detection and treatment of diabetic eye disease.
Loss of eyesight in people with diabetes is a national health
problem. People with diabetes are 25 times more likely to become
blind than those without diabetes, and diabetic eye disease can
cause as many as 25,000 new cases of blindness every year,
according to the National Eye Institute (NEI), one of the Federal
government's National Institutes of Health. While this article
speaks about diabetic eye disease in the US, the same applies to
all diabetes sufferers, no matter where you live.
Diabetic Retinopathy
Nearly half of the nation's estimated 16 million people with
diabetes will develop some degree of diabetic retinopathy, the most
common form of diabetic eye disease, and the leading cause of
blindness in American adults. Diabetic retinopathy damages the tiny
blood vessels in the retina, the light-sensitive tissue that lines
the back of the eye.
The disease does not have any early warning symptoms such as
pain, and vision may not change until the disease becomes severe.
"This is one of the most frightening things about diabetic eye
disease," says Dr. Paul Sieving, director of NEI. "People with
diabetic eye disease do not realize that their eyesight is slowly
deteriorating."
Diagnosing Diabetic Eye Disease
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Keeping your eyes healthy and preserving a
good eyesight is important to all. Even more so for diabetics, as
diabetic eye disease can cause blindness and gives no early warning
signs. Have your eyes checked regularly, especially if you're a
diabetic.
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The only way to diagnose diabetic eye disease in its early stages
is with a dilated eye exam. Using eye drops to enlarge the
patient's pupils, a dilated eye exam allows the eye care
professional to see more of the inside of the eye to check for
signs of the disease. People with diabetes need to make annual
dilated eye exams a priority. Ignoring the importance of an annual
eye exam could lead to trouble later on, when diabetes begins to
affect a person's eyesight.
Vision lost from diabetes cannot be restored. Yet in about 90
percent of those who would otherwise become blind, the early
detection of diabetic eye disease, combined with laser surgery when
needed, and appropriate follow-up, has helped preserve vision.
Laser surgery can shrink the abnormal blood vessels caused by
diabetic retinopathy.
Sieving notes that "the longer a person has diabetes, the more
likely it is that person will develop diabetic retinopathy.
However, studies have shown that people with diabetes who keep
their blood sugar levels as normal as possible slow the onset and
progression of diabetic retinopathy and lessen the need for laser
surgery. This may also help reduce other complications from the
disease, such as kidney disease, stroke and nerve damage."
Other Diabetic Eye Diseases
Individuals with diabetes are also at risk for other eye
diseases. Studies show that they are twice as likely to get a
cataract as a person who does not have the disease, and that
cataracts develop at an earlier age in people with diabetes.
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 someone has had diabetes, the
greater the risk of getting glaucoma.
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.
A free brochure, "Don't Lose Sight of Diabetic Eye Disease," is
available by writing to Diabetic Eye Disease, 2020 Vision Place,
Bethesda, MD 20892-3655. NEI's Web site, www.nei.nih.gov/health/index.htm provides additional
information about diabetic retinopathy.
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