Notes
Slide Show
Outline
1
Diabetic Retinopathy
2
The healthy eye
  • Light rays enter the eye through the cornea, pupil and lens.


  • These light rays are focused directly onto the retina, the light-sensitive tissue lining the back of the eye.


  • The retina converts light rays into impulses; sent through the optic nerve to your brain, where they are recognized as images.
3
What is diabetes?
  • Diabetes Mellitus is the inability of the body to use and store sugar properly, resulting in high blood sugar levels.


  • Results in changes in veins, arteries and capillaries in the body.
4
How does diabetes affect vision?
  • Could develop cataracts (clouding of the naturally clear lens in the eye).


  • May develop glaucoma (a disease of the optic nerve).


  • Risk of developing diabetic retinopathy: damage occurs to the fragile blood vessels inside the retina.
5
Diabetic retinopathy
  • Two types of diabetic retinopathy:


  • Nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR)
    • Early stage diabetic retinopathy

  • Proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR)
    • Later stage diabetic retinopathy
6
Nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR)
  • Also called background diabetic retinopathy.
  • Earliest stage of diabetic retinopathy.
  • Damaged blood vessels in the retina leak extra fluid and small amounts of blood into the eye.
  • Cholesterol or other fat deposits from blood, called hard exudates, may leak into retina.
7
Nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy
  • With NPDR, your central vision is affected by any of the following:


  • Hard exudates on the central retina (macula).
  • Microaneurysms (small bulges in blood vessels of the retina that often leak fluid).
  • Retinal hemorrhages (tiny spots of blood that leak into the retina).
  • Macular edema (swelling/thickening of macula).
  • Macular ischemia (closing of small blood vessels/capillaries).
8
Nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy
  • Macular edema


  • Macula thickens or swells, affecting vision.
  • Most common cause of vision loss in diabetes.
  • Vision loss may be mild to severe.
  • Peripheral (side) vision remains.
  • Laser treatment may help to stabilize vision.
9
Nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy
  • Macular ischemia


  • Small blood vessels, or capillaries, close, blurring vision.


  • Macula no longer receives enough blood to work properly.


  • Currently no effective treatment for macular ischemia.
10
Proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR)
  • Later stages of diabetic retinopathy.


  • Abnormal blood vessels begin to grow on surface of retina or optic nerve; can’t provide retina with normal blood flow (neovascularization).


  • PDR can cause severe visual loss and other serious complications, such as neovascular glaucoma and loss of the eye.
11
Proliferative diabetic retinopathy
  • With PDR, vision is affected when any of
  • the following occur:


  • Vitreous hemorrhage (new, abnormal blood vessels bleed into vitreous gel in center of eye, preventing light rays from reaching the retina).
  • Traction retinal detachment (new, abnormal blood vessels begin to shrink and tug on retina; may cause retina to detach).
  • Neovascular glaucoma (neovascularization occurs in the iris, causing pressure to build up in the eye, damaging the optic nerve).
12
Diagnosing diabetic retinopathy
  • Diabetes can cause vision in both eyes to change, even if you do not have retinopathy.


  • Rapid changes in your blood sugar alter the shape of your eye’s lens, and the image on the retina will become out of focus.


  • You can reduce episodes of blurred vision by maintaining good control of your blood sugar.
13
Diagnosing diabetic retinopathy
  • People with diabetes should see their ophthalmologist immediately if they have visual changes that:
    • Affect only one eye
    • Last more than a few days
    • Are not associated with a change in blood sugar

  • It is important that your blood sugar be consistently controlled for several days prior to seeing your ophthalmologist for an exam.
    • Uneven blood sugar causes a change in your eye’s focusing power,     interfering with your ophthalmologist’s measurements.
14
When to schedule an eye exam
  • If you were 30 years old or younger when your diabetes was first detected, you should have your first eye exam within five years after that diagnosis.
  • If you were 30 years old or older, your first exam should be within a few months of the diabetes diagnosis.
  • If you are pregnant, you should have an exam within the first trimester.
  • If you already have experienced a high-risk condition, such as kidney failure or amputation related to diabetes, schedule an eye exam immediately.
15
What happens during an eye exam
  • Your ophthalmologist will dilate your pupils and examine your retina with special instruments using bright lights.


  • Fluorescein angiography: a diagnostic procedure using a special camera to take photographs of the retina after a small amount of yellow dye (fluorescein) is injected into a vein in your arm.


  • The photographs of fluorescein dye traveling throughout the retinal vessels show:
    • Which blood vessels are leaking fluid
    • How much fluid is leaking
    • How many blood vessels are closed
    • Whether neovascularization is beginning
16
What happens during an eye exam
  • Fluorescein angiography helps the doctor determine:


  • Why vision is blurred.


  • Whether laser treatment should be started.


  • Where to apply laser treatment.
17
What happens during an eye exam
  • Ultrasound


  • If your ophthalmologist cannot see the retina because of vitreous hemorrhage, an ultrasound test may be done in the office.
  • The ultrasound “sees” through the blood to determine if your retina has detached.
  • If there is detachment near the macula, prompt surgery may be necessary.
  • After evaluation, your ophthalmologist will decide when you need to be treated or re-examined.
18
Treating diabetic retinopathy
  • Best treatment is to prevent development of retinopathy as much as possible.


  • Strict control of your blood sugar will significantly reduce the long-term risk of vision loss from diabetic retinopathy.


  • Laser surgery is often recommended for people with macular edema, PDR, and neovascular glaucoma.
19
Treating diabetic retinopathy
  • Laser surgery for macular edema


  • Laser is focused on the damaged retina near the macula to decrease fluid leakage.
  • Some may see laser spots near the center of their vision following treatment; usually fade with time, but may not disappear.
  • Uncommon for people who have blurred vision from macular edema to recover normal vision, although some may experience partial improvement.
  • Main goal of treatment: prevent further loss of vision.
20
Treating diabetic retinopathy
  • Laser surgery for PDR
  • (Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy)


  • Laser is focused on all parts of the retina except the macula.
  • This “panretinal” photocoagulation treatment causes abnormal new vessels to shrink; often prevents them from growing again.
  • Treatment decreases the chance that vitreous bleeding or retinal distortion will occur.
  • Multiple laser treatments over time are sometimes necessary.
21
Treating diabetic retinopathy
  • Vitrectomy surgery for advanced PDR
  • (Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy)


  • Occurs when the vitreous (white, gel-like substance in middle of eye) fills with blood.
  • Performed in the operating room, this microsurgical procedure involves removing the blood-filled vitreous and replacing it with a clear solution.
  • Often prevents further bleeding by removing abnormal vessels that caused bleeding.
  • Multiple laser treatments over time are sometimes necessary.
22
Diabetic retinopathy is controllable
  • You can significantly lower your risk of vision loss by maintaining strict control of your blood sugar level.
  • Treatment does not cure diabetic retinopathy but it is effective in preventing further vision loss.
  • Most people with diabetes retain normal eyesight; total blindness is very uncommon if retinopathy is treated.
  • Regular visits to your ophthalmologist (Eye M.D.) will help prevent vision loss.