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Diabetic Retinopathy
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Normal Vision
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Vision With Advanced
Diabetic Retinopathy
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Diabetic retinopathy is a leading cause of blindness in
the United States, occurring in about 25?50% of people with
diabetes.
People with Type 1 diabetes are especially at risk for
retinopathy. When Type 1 diabetes coexists with hypertension,
a person may be four times as likely to develop proliferative
retinopathy, the most damaging form of diabetic retinopathy.
It occurs in about 60% of people with Type I diabetes and
in about 5% of people with Type II diabetes within about
two decades after diabetes is diagnosed.
When diagnosed early in the course of the disease, diabetic
retinopathy can be effectively managed. Annual eye examinations
are essential in diabetic care to prevent permanently impaired
or lost vision.
Vision defects accompanying Type I diabetes are somewhat
common, and can lead to blindness without prompt and ongoing
intervention. Diabetic retinopathy that can cause vision
loss occurs with damage to the retina where light-sensitive
cells are located and images are processed.
Signs and Symptoms
In its earliest stages, diabetic retinopathy usually does
not produce symptoms. Once macular edema develops, vision
blurs and the quality of vision may fluctuate.
Bleeding can also cause vision loss, as the disease advances.
As bleeding and leakage increase, vision decreases. In severe
cases, vision is so impaired that the patient is only able
to distinguish light from dark in the affected eye.
Treatment
Diabetic retinopathy can be treated with laser photocoagulation
to seal off leaking blood vessels and destroy new growth.
Another procedure called a vitrectomy removes blood that
has leaked into the vitreous humor. Lost vitreous humor
is gradually replaced by the body, and vision improves.
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