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WHAT IS DIABETIC RETINOPATHY?
Diabetic retinopathy is a potentially blinding complication of diabetes that damages the eye's retina. As the disease progresses, blood vessels in the retina can leak into the part of the retina that lets us see detail, causing loss of vision. This is called macular edema. Also, new blood vessels can form which may bleed into the eye. This is the proliferative stage.

The disease often has no early warning signs. "The key to preventing vision loss is for diabetic patients to have dilated retinal exams. Those with Type I diabetes (juvenile onset) should be examined at 5 years after diagnosis, and yearly thereafter. Those with Type II diabetes (adult-onset) should be examined at diagnosis," commented Monique Roy, MD, Director of the Medical Retina Service at New Jersey Medical School.

Diabetic retinopathy affects half of the 14 million Americans with diabetes. It is the leading cause of blindness in people ages 20 to 64.

There are two treatments which are useful in preserving vision — laser photocoagulation and vitrectomy. Laser photocoagulation can stop the blood vessels from leaking and make new blood vessels shrink. This procedure reduces the risk of severe vision loss by more than 50%. If severe bleeding has occurred, a vitrectomy (removal of blood and scar tissue from the eye) and retinal detachment (reattachment of the retina) may restore useful vision.

 

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