Diabetic retinopathy is an eye condition caused by diabetes. The elevated blood sugar levels result in damage to the blood vessels at the back of the eye (retina). Read below to find answers to Frequently Asked Questions regarding diabetic retinopathy, including its stages, symptoms, and available treatment options.
Diabetic retinopathy is a complication of diabetes mellitus. The condition is characterized by damage and deterioration of blood vessels in the retina. If untreated, damaged blood vessels may lead to leaked fluid, growth of abnormal blood vessels, and subsequent central and/or peripheral vision loss as a result. Diabetic retinopathy can affect people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes.
There are two main types of diabetic retinopathy: early diabetic retinopathy and advanced diabetic retinopathy.
The four stages of diabetic retinopathy are as followed: mild, moderate, and severe (nonproliferative and proliferative).
Anyone with diabetes is at risk of diabetic retinopathy, and the longer you have diabetes, the more at risk you are of the condition developing. Other risk factors of individuals with diabetes that can attribute to diabetic retinopathy include:
Diabetic retinopathy produces a variety of symptoms, which may worsen as the disease progresses or it may be entirely asymptomatic. These can include:
Diabetic retinopathy can be diagnosed with a diabetic eye checkup with your eye doctor. This typically requires eye drops to dilate your pupils so that the retina can be imaged and examined. Eye doctors will look for things such as abnormal blood vessels, fatty deposits, scar tissue on the retina, bleeding in the vitreous, and other abnormalities on the optic nerve.
Some diagnostic tests an optometrist may run to further attempt to diagnose the disease include fluorescein angiography, which pinpoints blood vessels in the eye, and optical coherence tomography, which is used to measure the retina’s thickness.
Available treatment options that can slow the progression of diabetic retinopathy include:
Diabetic retinopathy screenings are checkups that help determine the presence of the disease. These screenings should include both a visual acuity exam and a retinal examination. Example diagnostic tests and screenings include Fundus Photography, Fluorescein Angiography, Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT), and B Scan Ultrasonography.
Any abnormal changes to your vision can be an initial sign, and a visit to your eye doctor can help determine the causes. This can include floaters, dark spots, blurriness, empty spots, and difficulty seeing colors.
Most importantly, vision threatening diabetic retinopathy may have no symptoms at all and this is the reason why it is important to get an annual diabetic eye exam even when your vision seems normal.
Damage caused by the disease is often permanent. However, some of the damage can be potentially reversed with treatments to bring back lost vision or to control the progression of the disease and keep it from worsening.
Diabetes (or elevated blood sugars in the body) can cause blindness by way of diabetic retinopathy, cataracts, glaucoma, and blurred vision. Chances of blindness are reduced with proper blood sugar management.
Diabetic retinopathy is caused as a result of complications from diabetes involving elevated blood sugars, in which blood vessels in the retina are damaged or have deteriorated, causing fluid leakage within the inner eye and otherwise abnormally regrown vessels.
There are many treatment options available for diabetic retinopathy, but the disease cannot be entirely cured. Instead, these treatments either slow the progression of the disease or restore obscured vision.
For more information on diabetic retinopathy or other retinal diseases, give us a call or visit our website.