Advanced Technology Helps Prevent Diabetic Retinopathy

Advanced Medicine TeleRetinal_Screening

About 35 percent of people with diabetes have signs of diabetic retinopathy—a common complication of diabetes and the leading cause of adult blindness. When detected and treated early, the risk of severe vision loss can be reduced by 90 percent.

The problem is about half of at-risk patients do not receive a regular eye screening and may not be aware they are slowly losing their vision. There are so many recommendations for diabetic patients—get your eyes checked, get your feet checked, get your flu shot, maintain your medications, check your blood sugar. Getting to the eye doctor can sometimes take a lower priority.

What is Diabetic Retinopathy?

In a healthy eyes, small blood vessels deliver nutrients and oxygen to the retina which keeps it healthy. This is important because the retina sends signals to the brain that become the images we see.

For people with diabetes, excess sugar in the blood can damage those delicate blood vessels even if their diabetes is well controlled with diet or medication.

Unfortunately, by the time people start noticing symptoms of diabetic retinopathy like blurred vision, difficulty seeing colors, floaters, and on occasion, sudden and complete loss of vision, the disease is often well advanced.

This is why early detection is so important.

Incorporating Screening into Primary Care Office Visits

At Lancaster General Health, patients can be screened at their primary-care provider’s office are using TeleRetina technology. Providers use a hand-held camera to capture an image of the back of the eye. The test takes about five minutes, is easy and painless, and does not require drops to dilate the eyes. Using special software, the images are sent to an ophthalmologist for review.

If you do have diabetic retinopathy, treatments that could include surgery, laser treatment or medicine, can help keep it from getting worse.

Can Diabetic Retinopathy Be Prevented?

TeleRetina does not take the place of a complete eye exam. It only looks for diseases that affect the retina. But it may save your sight. All people with diabetes should get an annual eye exam by an ophthalmologist.

In addition, there are steps you can take to reduce your chance of damaging the small blood vessels in the eye that that can lead to diabetic retinopathy:

  • Keep blood sugar and blood pressure levels within a target range
  • If you smoke, quit

Watch the video below to learn more about diabetic retinopathy and how TeleRetina technology available at LG Health Physicians primary care practices can help identify the condition before it causes vision damage.


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One in 3 American adults has prediabetes, and more than 84% of people with prediabetes don’t know they have it. So, take the risk test now to see where you stand.

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author name

Christian L. Hermansen, MD, MBA

Christian L. Hermansen, MD, MBA, is a family medicine physician with LG Health Physicians Family Medicine Downtown. Dr. Hermansen is also physician champion for the TeleRetina Program which screens for diabetic retinopathy in primary-care practices. He is a graduate of Jefferson Medical College and completed his residency at Lancaster General Hospital.

Call: 717-544-4950

About LG Health Hub

The LG Health Hub features breaking medical news and straightforward advice to help individuals of all ages make healthy choices and reach their wellness goals. The blog puts articles by trusted Lancaster General Health clinical experts, good 'n healthy recipes, videos, patient stories, and health risk assessments at your fingertips.

 

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