Diabetes and your eyes

 

Diabetes is a major cause of visual impairment in adults, so caring for your eyes is all important. The New Zealand Association of Optometrists demystifies this common complication of diabetes and offers advice.

The main way type 1 or type 2 diabetes can affect your sight is through damage to the retina – your eye’s light-sensitive lining. The damage is called diabetic retinopathy.

What is the retina?

The retina is the delicate layer of blood vessels and light-sensitive cells positioned at the back of your eye. It’s like the film in a camera: Images we see are formed on the retina itself and converted into electrical impulses that pass from the retina, along the optic nerve, to the brain.

The central part of the retina, opposite the pupil, is called the macula. This part is the most sensitive and allows us to see fine detail. The rest of the retina sees less well-defined images, but it gives us peripheral visual awareness and movement sensation. It also helps us see at night.

If the retina is damaged by diabetic retinopathy, the images formed on the retina are not detected by the light-sensitive cells and some of the electrical impulses are not transmitted to the brain, so our vision is reduced.

Early signs

The early signs of diabetic retinopathy are quite common among those living with diabetes. Often these changes are minor – that is, they don’t threaten your sight right now but they do require regular monitoring. Their presence also means that special attention should be given to blood-glucose control and treatment of other medical conditions such as blood pressure and abnormal cholesterol levels. This will reduce the chances of the retinopathy progressing.

How can diabetes damage the retina?

Too much sugar in the blood causes the walls of the smallest blood vessels in the retina to weaken, resulting in balloon-like bulges called microaneurysms. There can then be bleeding from these blood vessels (retinal haemorrhages) as well as fluid leakage (retinal oedema) and leakage of fats (hard exudates). The blood, fluids, and fats leak into the retinal tissue. If this leakage occurs at the macula, it is called macula oedema and vision will be reduced.

In some cases, the early signs of diabetic retinopathy progress to a more severe stage of eye disease called proliferative retinopathy. If untreated, 50% of those affected with proliferative retinopathy will suffer serious visual loss. This stage is marked by neovascularisation – the growth of very fine, delicate new blood vessels that bleed easily. This bleeding causes varying amounts of visual loss, and it may take considerable time for vision to return.

Sometimes, the bleeding results in the formation of scar tissue that contracts and pulls away the retina. This is called retinal detachment. It is a serious, sight-threatening condition and must be treated promptly.

How can diabetic retinopathy be treated?

Usually, an optometrist is your first port of call for regular monitoring, but if the condition is progressing you may need to be referred to an ophthalmologist for ongoing medical care.

If diabetic retinopathy threatens vision, it will require laser treatment by the ophthalmologist. The laser seals the leaking retinal blood vessels that cause damaging deposits of fat in the macula. The laser also stops neovascularisation – the growth of fragile abnormal blood vessels that may bleed and reduce sight suddenly.

Laser treatment mainly works by preventing and delaying further damage to the retina. Early detection of sight-threatening retinopathy is extremely important so that laser treatment can be done at the optimal time. This type of treatment is painless and can be carried out on an outpatient basis.

Surgical treatment (vitrectomy) may be required if bleeding into the eye is causing persistent cloudy vision or scarring has occurred. Surgery is also required if retinal detachment occurs. This is major eye surgery and requires a general anaesthetic.

Prevention is best

Do not wait until you notice problems with your eyes before having a retinal examination.

Sometimes diabetic changes to your retina are well advanced and unable to be treated by the time you notice them, so it’s important to get your eyes checked regularly no matter what.

If you are newly diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, you should have a retinal examination when first diagnosed. If you are newly diagnosed with type 1, you should have your first examination within the first five years of diagnosis. Children living with type 1 should have their first retinal exam either five years after diagnosis or when they are 10 – whichever comes first.

After your first examination, you need to have an eye examination every two years to pick up any changes that may be happening to your retina. Your eye exams need to be done by an optometrist or an ophthalmologist. They will tell you if you need to have your eyes examined more often than every two years.

However, if you are concerned about your sight or if, for any reason, you have not had regular enough eye exams, remember that your optometrist can provide a comprehensive eye examination at any time. You can also ask your GP for information about diabetes care from practitioners such as optometrists, ophthalmologists, or diabetes specialists – or about diabetic screening and monitoring services available in your area. Your GP can arrange a referral to any of these.

Pregnancy

Check with an optometrist or ophthalmologist about the possibility of more frequent eye examinations if you have diabetes and are pregnant, as pregnancy poses additional risks.

What does a diabetes eye exam involve?

This is a simple procedure and usually involves drops that dilate your pupils so that the retina can be directly examined. Modern digital cameras may also be used to photograph the retina, and this process may or may not require drops.

If drops are used, they will temporarily blur your near vision and make your eyes more sensitive to light. You should bring a pair of sunglasses with you.

Although some people can drive afterwards, leaving your car at home or bringing a driver with you is often a good idea.

HbA1c – an important tool in eye care

If you are new to diabetes, make sure you understand about HbA1c. Your GP or diabetes specialist should be regularly giving you a blood test to measure your HbA1c. This is your glycated haemoglobin – the amount of haemoglobin in your blood that currently has glucose attached to it. Measuring your HbA1c shows what your average blood-sugar levels have been over the past two to four months.

Measuring blood-sugar levels with a pin pricker or CGM helps you manage those levels on a daily basis, but a regular HbA1c test gives you a big picture view, so you can see how your blood sugar levels have been averaging over time.

If your HbA1c generally ranges between 43 and 52, the chances of developing sight-threatening eye disease are majorly reduced. If, over time, the number is greater than 64, then sooner or later sightthreatening retinal changes are likely to develop.

Key care points

To look after your sight:

  • maintain healthy blood glucose levels

  • know what your HbA1c is and get it checked regularly

  • treat general medical conditions such as high blood pressure and abnormal cholesterol levels

  • have regular eye examinations

  • report any rapid changes of vision to your healthcare professional straight away.

What is the difference between an optometrist and an ophthalmologist?

In New Zealand, an optometrist is an eyecare professional who has generally completed a five-year Bachelor of Optometry. They must be registered with the Optometrists and Dispensing Opticians Board and hold a current practising certificate.

An ophthalmologist is a specialist doctor who is trained to treat serious diseases of the eye. They will have completed a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery, and then spent several more years training and passing exams to become a specialist. They must be registered with the Medical Council of New Zealand.

The New Zealand Association of Optometrists

The New Zealand Association of Optometrists is concerned with the professional and clinical aspects of optometry.

The work of the NZAO includes:

  • promoting the importance of eye and vision care to the public

  • maintaining the highest clinical standards through credentialing, continuing professional development, and best practice standards

  • representing the eye care interests of the public to the government and the Ministry of Health.

Optometrists provide the majority of primary eye health care to the public of New Zealand.

The optometry scope of practice includes assessing, diagnosing, treating, and managing conditions affecting the eye and its appendages and the prescribing of medicines whose sale and supply is restricted by law to prescription by authorised prescribers.

NZAO is not involved in the commercial activities of the optical industry or any connection with the business activities of its members.





This article first appeared in the Summer 2020 issue of Diabetes Wellness, our flagship publication. With four issues a year, you can get it in print or digital.