Insight to Eyesight for Diabetics
When most people think of diabetes they think of a disease
wherein the body has difficulty maintaining the proper level of blood
sugar because of the absence or ineffectiveness of circulating
insulin. They may even
know that it is a serious disease that can cause problems including
heart disease, kidney disease and other circulatory problems that may
even at times result in amputations.
Many
people are unaware that diabetes causes a variety of eye problems that
may go undetected without a proper dilated eye examination.
Although most people who have diabetes have only minor eye
problems, this disease can cause other very serious problems that may
result in severe loss of vision or even blindness.
People with diabetes are almost twice as likely to develop
glaucoma, which is a condition wherein the pressure inside the eye
becomes elevated damaging the sensitive structures within the eye that
communicate the image received in the eye to the brain.
This condition has been referred to as the “sneak thief of
sight” because patients with this condition may have no signs or
symptoms of the disease. The
condition is diagnosed by having the intraocular pressure (IOP)
measured. This can be
done by your optometrist, ophthalmologist or even at glaucoma
screenings that are often provided through the local Lions Clubs.
This condition is often easily treatable with medicated eye
drops although some forms require laser or surgical treatment.
Patients
with diabetes are also at risk for developing cataracts that result in
clouding of the lens within the eye.
Studies show that people with diabetes are twice as likely to
develop a cataract and are more likely to develop it at an earlier age
than those without diabetes. Most
cataracts can be effectively treated with surgery.
A
third type of diabetic eye disease called diabetic retinopathy is the
leading cause of blindness in American adults.
In the back of each eye there is a thin layer of tissue called
the retina that receives the images projected by the lens of the eye.
This sensitive layer records the image that is seen and
transmits it through a complex system of nerves to the optic nerve,
which in turn transmits the image to the brain where it is
interpreted. The retina
is a highly vascular layer and some of these retinal blood vessels may
swell and leak fluid, which may distort or damage the retina resulting
in vision loss or blindness. This
condition may also progress a long way without any symptoms.
Nearly half of all people with diabetes will develop some
degree of diabetic retinopathy during their lifetime.
This is a condition that seldom has early warning signs but
when left untreated it is responsible for blindness in as many of
25,000 people a year in the United States.
This is a condition that can be treated.
This often involves using a laser beam to treat these blood
vessels and this type of treatment has proved to reduce the risk of
severe vision loss from this type of condition by 90 percent.
Although, laser surgery cannot restore vision that has already
been lost and that is why it is so important for people with diabetes
to have annual dilated eye examinations.
November
is National Diabetes Month and this is a time when many organizations
including Prevent Blindness America and the National Eye Institute as
well as 21 other organizations are working together to raise community
awareness of the various forms of diabetic eye disease.
If
you have diabetes, the key to preventing vision loss is taking good
care of yourself by getting regular exercise, maintaining a healthy
diet and keeping your blood sugar under good control.
Beyond these basics, early detection of diabetic eye disease is
essential in preventing vision loss.
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