Reduce Diabetic Blindness
Reduce Diabetic Blindness
DOCTOR SUGGESTS NEW PRIORITIES
COULD REDUCE DIABETIC BLINDNESS
James O'Rourke, MD, professor of pathology at
University of Connecticut Health Center, is calling for primary care deliverers to
regularly obtain an image of their diabetic patients' retinal blood vessels and then
catalog those as part of a permanent medical record. Today, one-half of all people with
diabetes will develop some degree of retinal damage during their lifetimes, and 10 percent
of these will become legally blind after having diabetes for 20 years. It doesn't have to
be so, Dr. O'Rourke believes.
New technologies, particularly in the field of
diagnostic imaging, are available to health care providers. The problem has been to chart
changes in an individual's eyes, and to do that, physicians need a "baseline," a
clear idea of the condition of the patient's eyes at a given time. The tests, already
available, which Dr. O'Rourke advocates, will provide such a "baseline."
With this information in hand, doctors and nurses
can easily discern changes in a patient's retinal blood vessels in subsequent years, and
quickly invoke proper treatment. The expenses of making and maintaining the record are
outweighed by the savings of very expensive therapies and rehabilitation for those who go
blind because of diabetes.
"We're not using our available resources,
manpower, or skills to maximal advantage to combat this problem," Dr. O'Rourke said.
"Diabetes and diabetic blindness numbers are growing, and we're not properly
deployed. We're losing this fight," he said.
Dr. O'Rourke suggested misunderstandings and
misconceptions may have contributed to why we are where we are now. His assessment of the
situation includes:
* Diabetic blindness is not a disease of the
retina, or an eye disease; it is a disease of the blood vessels in the retina. Diabetes
does not just cause retinal blood vessel damage; the disease causes widespread blood
vessel damage, particularly the fine blood vessels of the kidneys, nerves, brain, and
feet. Diabetes affects the walls of blood vessels. There are more than 10 billion tiny
blood vessels throughout the human body—or more than 600 square meters of wall
surface—about the size of three tennis courts.
* Viewing the retina is one of the most effective
means of detecting early blood vessel damage in diabetes. Unfortunately, viewing the
retinal blood vessels through an undilated pupil provides only a limited, transient image.
Seeing retinal blood vessel damage early on allows doctors to monitor and adjust
medication levels. While maintaining a normal blood sugar level is not easy, one of the
keys to it is early detection.
* New ways are needed to rapidly screen for
retinal diabetes at less cost. Proper planning and improved technology can help, but
screening has to be incorporated as part of a regular health maintenance program.
* The medical system is divided into
specialties that manage different aspects of diabetic care. Early detection
and prompt treatment of retinal diabetes requires more efficient interactions
among specialists, if we hope to reverse the diabetic blindness problem.
To improve efficiency, Dr. O'Rourke suggests
primary care physicians ought to obtain full digital color prints of retinal blood
vessels, with pupils dilated, from their patients who have had diabetes more than five
years. These images should be repeated annually, and maintained in the patient's medical
record, so that comparisons can be made if the occasion warrants.
Dr. O'Rourke also suggests that community
hospitals make retinal imaging available to primary care physicians.
"Convenient screening by retinal imaging is
the key to early detection," he said. "The procedure takes 10 minutes, and it is
painless. We do it here at the Health Center in our Vascular Radiology Division, thanks to
support from the Connecticut Lions. This is something that will materially help reduce the
growing problem of diabetic blindness."
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