Wednesday, 29 September 2021

What You Need to Know about Diabetes and Eye Health

 

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What You Need to Know about Diabetes and Eye Health

Medically reviewed by Michelle L. Griffith, MD — Written by Ann Pietrangelo and Daniel Potter — Updated on August 2, 2021

Diabetes can lead to blurry vision in several ways.

In some cases, it’s a minor problem that you can resolve by stabilizing your blood sugar or taking eye drops. Other times, it’s a sign of something more serious that’s worth discussing with your doctor.

In fact, blurred sight is often one of the first warning signs of diabetes.

Blurry vision means it’s harder to make out fine details in what you’re seeing. Several causes can stem from diabetes, as it may be a sign your glucose level is not in the right range — either too high or too low.

The reason your sight blurs may be fluid leaking into the lens of your eye. This makes the lens swell and change shape. Those changes make it hard for your eyes to focus, so things start to look fuzzy.

You may also get blurred vision when you start insulin treatment. This is due to shifting fluids, but it generally resolves after a few weeks. For many people, as blood sugar levels stabilize, so does their vision.

Causes of blurry vision in the longer term can include diabetic retinopathy, a term that describes retinal disorders caused by diabetes. The stages of diabetic retinopathy include:

  • Stage 1: mild nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy
  • Stage 2: moderate nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy
  • Stage 3: severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy
  • Stage 4: proliferative diabetic retinopathy

Most people don’t show symptoms of diabetic retinopathy until it has progressed to stage 4. Symptoms at this stage include:

  • blurry vision
  • eye floaters
  • difficulty seeing at night
  • loss of vision
  • distorted vision
  • color changes in vision

While diabetic retinopathy can’t be reversed, it can be stabilized with treatment.

You might also have blurry vision if you’re developing cataracts. People with diabetes tend to develop cataracts at a younger age than other adults. Cataracts cause the lens of your eyes to become cloudy.

Other symptoms include:

  • faded colors
  • clouded or blurry vision
  • double vision, usually in just one eye
  • sensitivity to light
  • glare or halos around lights
  • vision that doesn’t improve with new glasses or a prescription that must be changed often

Hyperglycemia results from glucose building up in the blood when the body lacks enough insulin to process it.

Besides blurred vision, other symptoms of hyperglycemia include:

  • headache
  • fatigue
  • increased thirst and urination

Managing your glucose levels to avoid hyperglycemia is important because, over time, poor blood sugar control can lead to more problems with sight and potentially increase the risk of irreversible blindness.

Blurry vision can also be a symptom of glaucoma, a disease in which pressure in your eye damages the optic nerve. According to the National Eye Institute, if you have diabetes, your risk of glaucoma is double that of other adults.

Other symptoms of glaucoma may include:

  • loss of peripheral vision or tunnel vision
  • halos around lights
  • reddening of the eyes
  • ocular (eye) pain
  • nausea or vomiting

The macula is the center of the retina, and it’s the part of the eye that gives you sharp central vision.

Macular edema is when the macula swells due to leaking fluid. Other symptoms of macular edema include wavy vision and color changes.

Diabetic macular edema (DME) stems from diabetic retinopathy. It usually affects both eyes.

The National Eye Institute estimates that around 7.7 million Americans have diabetic retinopathy, and of those, nearly 1 in 10 has DME.

If you have diabetes, you’re at increased risk for a variety of eye problems. It’s important to manage your blood sugar, follow all medications and directions for testing, and have regular checkups and eye exams. This should include a comprehensive eye exam with dilation every year.

Be sure to tell your doctor about all of your symptoms, as well as all the medications you take.

Blurred vision can be a minor problem with a quick fix, such as eye drops or a new prescription for your eyeglasses.

However, it can also indicate a serious eye disease or an underlying condition other than diabetes. That’s why you should report blurry vision and other vision changes to your doctor.

In many cases, early treatment can correct the problem or prevent it from getting worse.

Last medically reviewed on July 23, 2021






Tuesday, 21 September 2021

INSULIN @ 100

 

Celebrating a Century of Health
Innovation at the University of Toronto

Our revolutionary discovery of insulin has saved millions of lives.

It also sparked a culture of ingenuity and collaboration that continues to change the world.

DISCOVER THE STORY BELOW

Insulin 100

Celebrating a Century of Health
Innovation at the University of Toronto

Our revolutionary discovery of insulin has saved millions of lives.

It also sparked a culture of ingenuity and collaboration that continues to change the world.

DISCOVER THE STORY BELOW
Frederick Banting in his laboratory at the University of Toronto, ca. 1932.

A Life Saving Discovery is Born

Five-year-old Teddy Ryder was among the first patients to receive the “pancreatic extract” co-discovered by Frederick Banting and Charles Best at the University of Toronto in the summer of 1921. He would go on to live 71 more years with diabetes, one of millions of lives saved and made better by insulin.

When news of insulin’s discovery broke in the spring of 1922, Teddy’s weight had dropped to just 26 pounds. He’d lost interest in playing and was unable to take more than a few steps on his own.

Writing to Frederick Banting, Teddy’s uncle—a doctor at New York’s Bellevue Hospital—stressed his nephew’s perilous condition: “It looks to me as though a very few months … will be all he can hold out … I need not tell you how earnestly I hope you will see your way clear to treat him.”

Banting did see his way to treating Teddy. Travelling to Toronto by train with his mother, the little boy received his first dose of insulin on July 10, 1922. By the fall Teddy was strong enough to return home to his family and a new life in New Jersey. “I wish you could come to see me,” the now robust six-year-old wrote to Banting the following year. “I am a fat boy now and I feel fine. I can climb a tree.”