Diabetes & your Eyes.

Diabetes is the leading cause of visual impairment among patients below the age of 50. Many of the patients who suffer a loss in vision first present for eye examination when, unknown to the patient, the eye disease is already advanced. A few others lose vision despite meticulous eye care. With proper and timely treatment the likelihood of losing vision as a result of diabetic eye disease is much less than in the past.

Diabetes is primarily a disease of tiny blood vessels, called capillaries, the thin vessels that connect veins and arteries and act in the circulatory system as the loading docks for nutrients, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and waste products. The damage to the capillaries is cumulative and, as we currently understand it, dependent upon the total time and amount that the blood sugar is above normal. In insulin-dependent diabetes where the onset is often very abrupt, this accumulation of the effects of abnormal blood sugar usually does not show up as any sort of visual problem until at least five years after the initial diagnosis. In the adult onset non-insulin-dependent type of diabetes, eye disease can show up considerably earlier for the simple reason that the diabetes may have been smoldering at a very low level for a number of years prior to the time that the diagnosis is actually made.

DIABETIC VISUAL CHANGES THAT ARE NOT RETINOPATHY

Besides the accumulation of damage to small blood vessels as a result of high blood sugars, the level of blood sugar can more directly affect vision. Fortunately these direct effects are not permanent. When the blood sugar is over about 200 for several hours or several days, the blood sugar causes the lens in the eye to swell and produces transient nearsightedness. This effect goes away once the blood sugar is corrected to a normal level. It is this effect that causes many adult onset diabetics to experience severe visual blurring during the month or so immediately after diagnosis when blood sugar is being gradually brought into the normal range.

On the other end of the spectrum, some diabetics experience peculiar visual symptoms as the first hint of a hypoglycemia, the circumstance when the blood sugar is so low that the brain and eyes are not being properly fed.

DIABETIC RETINOPATHY

The long-term damage to capillaries in the eye manifests itself especially in the retina,resulting in what is known as diabetic retinopathy. In the early stages, only tiny dots of red cells that have escaped from damaged capillaries into the retinal tissue (dot hemorrhages) and outpouchings of the walls of tiny blood vessels (microaneurysms)

can be seen. This is referred to as background diabetic retinopathy. Damage to blood vessels can then proceed down two paths with two different visual results and two different treatments. One problem, macular swelling (macular edema), results from damaged capillary walls becoming abnormally permeable. The other problem, the growth of new blood vessels (proliferative diabetic retinopathy) results from the complete clogging of large beds of capillaries. Sometimes these problems develop separately and sometimes together. We will discuss them as if they occurred separately.

DIABETIC MACULAR EDEMA

Patches of capillaries damaged by high blood sugar may leak serum, including fat and protein, into the adjacent retinal tissue. This tissue swelling causes the retina in that area to malfunction. If the affected area involves the center of the retina, gradually developing blurry vision results.

The exact location of the leaks can be demonstrated by a test called fluorescein angiography. This is a test done in the office using a fluorescent dye injected into the large vein in the crook of the patient’s arm. Photographs are taken of the back of the eye with ordinary light, not x-rays. The leakage characteristics of the dye define the areas of damage to the capillaries. Using the fluorescein angiogram as a sort of road map, a laser can be used with an extremely fine light beam to focally cauterize the leaky spots, often resulting in the drying up of the swollen tissue.

A very careful clinical study about 10 years ago demonstrated that when such treatment was properly applied, treated eyes were on the average seeing better at three years after the treatment than eyes that were not treated. (It should be noted that some eyes lose substantial amounts of central vision even with optimal laser treatment due to progression of the underlying diabetic disease).

In general, the treatment helps the eye to preserve the vision that it has rather than producing visual improvement. The treatment is very minor from the patient’s perspective. Many patients have noted that the treatment is less of a nuisance than the fluorescein angiogram necessary to perform it.

The reduction in macular swelling accomplished by the laser develops only gradually over the next two to four months. Usually, if further treatment is necessary or desirable, it is not performed on the same eye until about four months have passed.

For several months following the laser treatment, some patients are aware of some tiny blank spots in the vision near the center which corresponds to the actual locations of the laser burns. This perception tends to gradually fade, but the fading occurs very slowly.

PROLIFERATIVE DIABETIC RETINOPATHY

When whole beds of capillaries close off and fail to carry the necessary oxygen and nutrients, the tissue begins to starve. Starving retinal tissue sends out a chemical message (angiogenesis factor) which asks for new blood vessels to grow. Unfortunately, because of the structure of the eye the resulting new blood vessels grow in the wrong place, usually off the surface of the retina into the vitreous in the interior of the eye.

In that location, they are subject to being tugged upon by the shrinking vitreous jelly. This tugging often produces bleeding in the eye which the patient sees as strings and specks that usually develop very suddenly, often over night. Each of the spots where new blood vessels grow also tacks the vitreous to the retina, establishing a point at which the retina can be elevated or torn by later contraction of the vitreous.

Before the laser treatment for this condition became available in the late 1960’s, ophthalmologists new that a diabetic eye that presented with vitreous hemorrhage had a 50 percent chance of going on to become stone blind within three years. With timely treatment today, only 1 or 2 percent of such eyes will ultimately become completely blind.

The laser treatment for proliferative diabetic retinopathy is more involved than that for macular edema. Ultimately somewhere between 700 and 2000 burn spots are made in the peripheral retina. This substantial cauterization destroys much of the starving retinal tissue.

Dead retinal tissue no longer asks for new blood vessels to grow, resulting in cessation of growth and often shrinkage of the new blood vessels observed. Because this does not happen instantaneously, it is possible to perform a laser treatment and to have further vitreous hemorrhage occur after the treatment. Although this is a major nuisance, the, natural history of vitreous hemorrhage is to gradually clear.

Unfortunately, such clearance can take several to many months. If laser treatment has been placed before the hemorrhage, the new blood vessels that caused it are likely to be withering rather than growing. Therefore, the ultimate visual outcome is expected to be substantially better in those eyes with prior treatment.

Unlike the treatment for macular edema, the laser treatment for proliferative diabetic retinopathy (called panretinal photocoagulation) is usually done with placement of a local anesthetic. Marcaine, Xylocaine, or a combination of the two is injected not into the eye itself but into the tissue near the eye with a long thin needle. With this the eye goes either partially or completely “to sleep,” so that the treatment can be performed entirely painlessly.

The anesthetic sometimes produces temporary double vision, which is best relieved by patching one eye for a number of hours. When the eye wakes up, there is sometimes a headache or brow ache which usually is relieved quite well with Tylenol, or in the unusually severe case with crushed ice in a baggy wrapped in a washcloth held over the closed eye. Head elevation and avoidance of heavy lifting and strenuous exercise can also be helpful during the early period following the treatment. The eye may be quite light sensitive. Sunglasses help.

Vision is often quite blurry for a few days and moderately blurry for as long as a few months. Initially, there are many shimmering specks in the peripheral part of the vision corresponding to the areas of laser treatment. This gradually fades over a period of months.

Surprisingly, despite the dramatic appearance of the peripheral retina after one of these treatments, central and peripheral vision are often very good. A few eyes lose some of the sharpness of the central vision around the time of such treatment.

It is impossible to know whether this is because of progression of the smoldering diabetic retinopathy or if it is actually a direct consequence of treatment. In any case, because of that small chance of vision not improving, our tendency is to wait to perform treatment until it is very clear that the small risks of treatment substantially outweigh the risk of continued observation.

PREVENTION

The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) proved conclusively that the better the blood sugar control as measured by hemoglobin A1c the less the severity and progression of diabetic retinopathy. We all hope that one day we will be able to routinely normalize blood sugar with some sort of transplant or Implant. In the meantime you can help save you vision, heart, kidneys and feet by working with your regular medical doctor to control your blood sugar as closely as possible.

You cannot benefit from preventive treatment unless you know that you have a need for it. Examination by an eye physician who is aware you are diabetic and examines you with that in mind is essential. In the complete absence of retinopathy re-examination should be done yearly or, under certain circumstances and at the direction of your eye physician, once every two years.