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Medicine is to heal from the inside

Understanding Diabetic Retinopathy

Introduction
Diabetic retinopathy is a disease that affect retina that occurs in patients with long-standing diabetes mellitus, and develops to some degree from mild to severe.

Burden of Disease
According to recent statistics, about 19 million Americans aged 20 years or older have either diagnosed or undiagnosed diabetes mellitus; about one-third are not aware that they have the disease. An additional 26% of adults (54 million persons) have impaired fasting blood glucose levels. In the United States, an estimated three out of five people with diabetes have one or more of the complications associated with the disease.


With the increasing population with diabetes, surely will increase the health complications related to diabetes. One of them is diabetic retinopathy.
Recently, Diabetic retinopathy is a leading cause of new cases of legal blindness among working-age in developed nations. The prevalence rate for retinopathy for adults aged 40 years and older in the United States is 3.4% (4.1 million persons); the prevalence rate for vision-threatening retinopathy is 0.75% (899,000 persons). Assuming a similar prevalence of diabetes mellitus, the projected numbers in 2020 would be 6 million persons with diabetic retinopathy and 1.34 million persons with vision-threatening diabetic retinopathy.

Risk Factors
The important risk factor of having diabetic retinopathy is having a diabetes, whether it types I or II, it doesn't matter. Since this disease only occurs in person who has diabetes.

Another risk factor is Duration of diabetes, this factor is highly associated with the development of diabetic retinopathy. After 5 years, approximately 25% of type 1 patients have retinopathy. After 10 years, almost 60% have retinopathy, and after 15 years, 80% have retinopathy. And for type 2 patients who have a known duration of diabetes of less than 5 years, 40% of those patients taking insulin and 24% of those not taking insulin have retinopathy. These rates increase to 84% and 53%, respectively, when the duration of diabetes has been documented for up to 19 years. Proliferative diabetic retinopathy develops in 2% of type 2 patients who have diabetes for less than 5 years and in 25% of patients who have diabetes for 25 years or more. These percentages are based on data from the 1980s before there was closer monitoring and tighter glycemic control, and they may have improved.

Well, in conclusion we can say that the longer a person has diabetes the higher risk for diabetic retinopathy.

The severity of hyperglycemia is the key alterable risk factor associated with the development of diabetic retinopathy. There is general agreement that duration of diabetes and severity of hyperglycemia are the major risk factors for developing retinopathy.

Anyway, once retinopathy is present, duration of diabetes appears to be a less important factor than hyperglycemia for progression from earlier to later stages of retinopathy.

Others risk factors such as Intensive management of hypertension has been demonstrated to slow retinopathy progression, and elevated serum lipid levels are associated with the development of retinopathy.

There is less agreement among studies concerning the importance of other factors such as age, type of diabetes, clotting factors, renal disease, physical inactivity, and use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. Many of these factors are associated with the substantial cardiovascular morbidity and mortality and other complications associated with diabetes. Thus, it is reasonable to encourage patients with diabetes to be as compliant as possible with therapy of all medical aspects of their disease.

Disease Progression
The progression of Diabetic retinopathy can be predicted in an orderly fashion from minimal changes to more severe stages if there is no intervention. It is important to recognize the stages in which treatment may be beneficial. Several decades of clinical research have provided excellent data on the natural course of the disease and on treatment strategies that are 90% effective in preventing the occurrence of severe vision loss.
Diabetic Retinopathy

The earliest clinically apparent stages is called nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR) and is characterized by retinal vascular abnormalities including microaneurysms, intraretinal hemorrhages, and cotton-wool spots. Increased retinal vascular permeability that occurs at this or later stages of retinopathy may result in retinal thickening (edema) and lipid deposits (hard exudates). Clinically significant macular edema (CSME) is a term commonly used to describe retinal thickening and/or adjacent hard exudates that either involve the center of the macula or threaten to spread into it. Patients with macular edema, will experience a blurred vision, color disturbances, distorted images, etc. since macula is the center of vision. These patients should be considered for focal laser photocoagulation, particularly if the center of the macula is already involved or if retinal thickening/adjacent hard exudates are very close to it.

As diabetic retinopathy progresses, there is a gradual closure of retinal vessels, which results in impaired perfusion and retinal ischemia. Signs of increasing ischemia include venous abnormalities (e.g., beading, loops), microaneurysms, and more severe and extensive vascular leakage characterized by increasing retinal hemorrhages and exudation. When these signs progress beyond certain defined thresholds, severe NPDR is diagnosed. Patients with this degree of retinopathy should be considered for possible treatment with panretinal (scatter) laser photocoagulation.

The more advanced stage, proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR), is characterized by the onset of neovascularization of the inner surface of the retina induced by the retinal ischemia. New vessels at the optic disc (NVD) and new vessels elsewhere in the retina (NVE) are prone to bleed, resulting in vitreous hemorrhage. These new vessels may undergo fibrosis and contraction; this and other fibrous proliferation may result in epiretinal membrane formation, vitreoretinal traction bands, retinal tears, and traction or rhegmatogenous retinal detachments.
When new vessels are accompanied by vitreous hemorrhage, or when new vessels at the optic disc occupy greater than or equal to about one-quarter to one-third disc area, even in the absence of vitreous hemorrhage, PDR is said to be in the high-risk stage.
Neovascular glaucoma can result from new vessels growing on the iris and anterior chamber angle structures. Patients with neovascular glaucoma or high-risk PDR should receive prompt panretinal photocoagulation.
Vision of Diabetic Retinopathy

Prevention and Early Detection
Primary prevention of diabetic retinopathy is by not having diabetes, do a healthy lifestyle with exercise and weight control may decrease the risk of developing diabetes in some patients. With the prevention of diabetes surely will prevent the occurance of diabetic retinopathy.

In many cases the blinding complications of diabetes mellitus can be prevented or moderated. Recent innovations in treatment can yield substantial cost savings compared with the direct costs for those disabled by vision loss.

The early detection is need to emphasize in order to identify earliest stages of diabetic retinopathy thus can properly treated. They are several forms of retinal screening with standard fundus photography or digital imaging, with and without dilation, are being investigated as a means of detecting retinopathy.

Appropriately validated digital imaging technology can be a sensitive and effective screening tool to identify patients with diabetic retinopathy for referral for ophthalmic evaluation and management. Digital cameras with stereoscopic capabilities are useful for identifying subtle neovascularization and macular edema. At this time, it is not clear that photographic screening programs achieve a greater reduction in vision loss than does routine community care in areas where access to ophthalmologists is straightforward.

At this time, these technologies are not considered a replacement for a comprehensive eye evaluation by an ophthalmologist experienced in managing diabetic retinopathy. Furthermore, an ophthalmologists, also can play an important role in the total care of the patient with diabetes. For example, at the time of the eye examination, patients can be counseled about the importance of blood glucose and blood pressure control.
But, the problems most of diabetic patients doesn't know when to find an opthalmologist since they doesn't any changes in visions. Current recommendation stated that annual eye examination is needed for the patients that having diabetes at least 5 years.

The development and progression of diabetic retinopathy in patients with type 1 diabetes can be delayed if glucose concentrations are maintained in the near-normal range. Strict glucose control also resulted in a 50% reduction in the rate of progression of retinopathy in patients with existing retinopathy. At the 6- and 12-month visits, a small number of patients had a transient early worsening of the retinopathy in the intensive treatment group, but there was no effect on visual acuity.

In patients with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes. Intensive blood glucose control by either the sulfonylureas or insulin decreased the risk of microvascular complications but not the risk of macrovascular disease. There were no adverse effects of the individual drugs on the cardiovascular outcome. In this study, there was a 29% reduction in the need for retinal photocoagulation surgery in the group with intensive glucose therapy compared with those receiving conventional treatment.

Conclusion
It is important to educate all patients who have diabetes about the disease and to emphasize the value of maintaining blood glucose (as monitored by hemoglobin A1c) as near normal as is safely possible. The studies have shown that lowering blood glucose reduces other end-organ complications as well, including nephropathy and neuropathy and cardiovascular disease.
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Glaucoma: A Sight Thief

Introduction
During my clinical rotation in medical education at Opthalmology Department, I found a lot of interesting eye cases. Thus, i couldn't forget for the rest of my life.

One of those cases is glaucoma. What is Glaucoma? Some people say it as sight thief, thus decreasing your vision without any symptoms, and when you are aware of it, it's been too late.

Approximately 2.8 million Americans have been diagnosed with glaucoma. Another 2.8 million may be living with the disease and not
yet know it. Worldwide, it is estimated that about 66.8 million people have visual impairment from glaucoma, with nearly 6.7 million suffering from bilateral blindness.
It is likely that only 50% of people living with glaucoma are actually aware they have the disease.

Glaucoma is group of eye disorders that have few symptoms in their early stages, but eventually leads to damage of the optic nerve (the bundle of nerve fibers that carries information from the eye to the brain), which can then lead to loss of side vision or complete blindness.

Some of the cases that i found during my clerkship, are advanced stage or almost blind, only pinhole vision left, while the patient is still teenager.

Blindness that is caused by glaucoma is different with cataract, in glaucoma the blindness is permanent, while in cataract can be cured by cataract extraction.
Thus early detection of glaucoma is important to prevent or slow down the ongoing nerve damaged.
Mechanism of Glaucoma
Glaucoma, Vision Stealer

Aqueous Humor and Glaucomatous Damaged
Most, but not all, forms of glaucoma are characterized by high eye (intraocular) pressure. Intraocular pressure remains normal when some of the fluid (aqueous humor) produced by the eye’s ciliary body flows out freely (follow blue arrow). Aqueous humor flows from the ciliary body into the anterior chamber, out through a spongy tissue at the front of the eye called the trabecular meshwork and into a drainage canal (dark blue region next to the trabecular meshwork). In open-angle glaucoma, fluid does not flow freely through the trabecular meshwork, causing an increase in intraocular pressure, damage to the optic nerve and vision loss.

Seems like Aqueous humor is the source of the problems, does it has a function for our eyes? It's maybe become question for most of glaucoma patients since they don't get enough information.

Aqueous humor is secreted by ciliary body in order to supply nutrition for avascular tissues in our eyes such as cornea and lens. Besides that aqueous humor has role in order to maintain eye shape, and prevent eye collapse or pthisis bulbi. Thus aqueous humor is important to maintain function of our eye as vision organ.
But, in glaucoma patients, there are a problems related to aqueous humor circulation, mostly at excretory part thus causes the increased of intraocular pressure.

The increased of intraocular pressure spread diffusely according to Pascal's Law. But in eye, there is a weaker part or more sensitive tissue that is optic nerve. The increased of pressure damaged the nerve directly or indirectly. And when optic nerve is damaged, the damaged is irreversible.

Types of Glaucoma
Open-Angle Glaucoma
Open-angle glaucoma, the most common form of glaucoma, accounting for at least 90% of all glaucoma cases:
- Is caused by the slow clogging of the drainage canals, resulting in increased eye pressure
- Has a wide and open angle between the iris and cornea
- Develops slowly and is a lifelong condition
- Has symptoms and damage that are not noticed.

“Open-angle” means that the angle where the iris meets the cornea is as wide and open as it should be. Open-angle glaucoma is also called primary or chronic glaucoma.

Angle-Closure Glaucoma
It is also called acute glaucoma or narrow-angle glaucoma. Unlike open-angle glaucoma, angle-closure glaucoma is a result of the angle between the iris and cornea closing.

Angle-closure glaucoma comes in two forms: acute or chronic.
Acute angle-closure glaucoma occurs when the normal flow of aqueous humor between the iris and the lens is suddenly blocked. Symptoms may include severe pain, nausea, vomiting, blurred vision and a rainbow halo appearing around lights. Acute angle-closure glaucoma is a medical emergency that must be treated immediately or blindness can result in one or two days.

Chronic angle-closure glaucoma progresses slowly and can produce damage without symptoms, similar to open-angle glaucoma.

Normal-Tension Glaucoma (NTG)
Also called low-tension or normal-pressure glaucoma. In normal-tension glaucoma the optic nerve is damaged even though the eye pressure is not very high. We still don't know why some people’s optic nerves are damaged even though they have almost normal pressure levels.

There are also several other forms of glaucoma, including normal-tension, congenital, juvenile and secondary. Secondary glaucoma can be open-angle or closed-angle and results from another medical condition in the eye or body. Examples of secondary glaucoma include pseudoexfoliation syndrome, neovascular, pigmentary, and iridocorneal endothelial syndrome (ICE syndrome).
Narrowing of Vision
Glaucoma Vision

Risk Factors
Strong risk factors for open-angle glaucoma include:
- High eye pressure
- Family history of glaucoma
- Age 40 and older for African Americans
- Age 60 and older for the general population
- Thin cornea
- Suspicious optic nerve appearance with increased cupping (size of cup, the space at the center of optic nerve, is larger than normal)

Potential risk factors for open-angle glaucoma include:
- High myopia (very severe nearsightedness)
- Diabetes
- Eye surgery or injury
- High blood pressure
- Use of corticosteroids (for example, eye drops, pills, inhalers and creams)

Glaucoma Evaluation
Eye doctors use several tests to detect glaucoma including: visual acuity test, visual field test, dilated eye exam, tonometry, pachymetry, ophthalmoscopy, gonioscopy and optic nerve imaging.

Individuals at high risk for glaucoma should have a dilated pupil eye examination, including a visual field test, every 1-2 years or as directed by a doctor.

Currently, there is no cure for glaucoma; however, through early diagnosis and treatment, the disease can be controlled before vision loss or blindness occurs. Treatments for open-angle glaucoma include: medications, usually eye drops, to help eye fluid drain more effectively or lessen fluid production; laser surgery; and conventional surgery.

New treatment research is focused on lowering pressure inside the eye, finding medications to protect and preserve the optic nerve from the damage that causes vision loss, and the role of genetic factors.
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A Brief about Contact Lens

Introduction
Contact Lens is a thin, clear disks of plastic that floats on the surface of the eye. It usually as a corrective, cosmetic, or therapeutic lens that placed on the cornea of the eye.

Millions of people around the world wear contact lenses, more than 24 million in the United States alone. Depending on your lifestyle, your motivation and the health of your eyes, contact lenses may provide a safe and effective alternative to eyeglasses when used with proper care and maintenance.

Refractive anomaly is quite common in population, maybe is the most common factor that causes blurred vision. Most of refractive anomaly requires correction using glasses in order to achieve a better vision. Most the contact lenses users have a problem in refraction thus they use contact lens for therapeutic or correction reasons.

Contact lenses has become popular or trends in lifestyle since it give a better cosmetically compare to eye glasses. But only little of users know about its beneficience and side-effects.

In this article, i'm gonna discuss about the benefits of contact lenses and its complications.
Wearing a Contact Lenses
Wearing a Contact Lenses

Kinds of Contact Lenses
There are two general types of lenses: hard and soft.

The hard lenses most commonly used today are rigid gas-permeable, or RGP. They are made of plastics and other materials such as silicone or fluoropolymers. Hard lenses hold their shape, yet allow the free flow of oxygen through the lenses to the cornea.

RGP lenses may be the best choice when the cornea has enough astigmatism (is shaped like an egg instead of an orange) that a soft lens will not provide sharp vision. They may also be preferable when a person has allergies or tends to form protein deposits on his or her contacts.

Soft lenses are the choice of most contact lens wearers. These lenses are comfortable and come in many options for how you wear them. Soft lenses nowadays are made from substances with high water content, thus permit oxygen diffusion through it easily. Soft-lenses could cause allergic reaction for those who are sensitive with the lens components.

Daily wear lenses are the least expensive, are removed nightly and are replaced on an individualized schedule. They should not be used as an extended-wear lens.
Extended wear lenses are worn overnight but are removed at least weekly for thorough cleaning and disinfection. They are being recommended less frequently, since there is a greater risk of corneal infection with any overnight wear of contact lenses.
Disposable wear lenses are more expensive, but convenient. They are removed nightly and replaced on a daily, weekly or monthly basis. Disposable lenses are sometimes recommended for people with allergies and for those who tend to form deposits on their lenses.
Colored contact lenses can change the appearance of your eye color.
Toric soft contact lenses can correct astigmatism, although sometimes not as well as RGP lenses. They usually cost more than other contact lenses.

Contact Lenses from Clinical View
Visual Fields
Contact lenses is placed closely to the pupil, and doesn't need a frame in usage, thus factors give a better visual field correction than eye glasses. Contact lenses also only cause little marginal visual field distortion compare to eye glasses.

Accomodation
Compare to eye glasses, contact lenses increased the needs of accomodation in nearsightness and decrease the needs of accomodation in farsightnes compare with eye glasses.

Fitting Process
In using contact lenses whether hard or soft-lens, there is a need of fitting process, that is measuring the suitable contact lenses for the wearer. Fitting process in soft-lenses is shorter than hard-lenses because the material is soft thus can adapted to cornea shape easily.

Contact Lenses Complications
The complication of wearing contact lenses can be classified into: eyes and lenses.
Eyes or ocular complications are related to multifactorial such as allergic to lenses material, mechanical trauma, and disturbing corneal protection and nutrition since corneal is avascular tissue, thus nutrition is being supply by surrounding environment, and tear is one of the nutrition for the cornea.
Contact lenses, disturb nutritional supply for the cornea thus, will cause barrier loses then lead to infection of cornea.
Eye infection
Eye Infection related to Contact Lenses

Thus most of contact lenses wearers are suggested to remove their lenses during night or bedtime, to decrease the risk of corneal infection.

Any lens that is removed from the eye needs to be cleaned and disinfected before it is reinserted. The best type of cleansing system is depending on the type of lens, any allergies might have and whether or not eye tends to form protein deposits.

Care of contact lenses includes cleaning their case, since it is a potential source of infection. The case should be rinsed with contact lens solution and allowed to dry.

Homemade saline (salt water) solutions have been linked to serious corneal infections and should not be used.

The complication for the lenses is the occurance of deposits on the lenses such as iron, protein, fungi, etc. Thus make the lenses not clear and causing blurred image, discomfort also a predisposition factor for infection.

Therapeutic Contact Lenses
The usage of contact lenses for therapeutic purposes usually done for cornea abnormality. One of the indication is cornea ulceration. In cornea ulceration, there is an epithelial damaged. The epithelial regeneration or repair often not sufficient enough since it always disturb by blink mechanism, thus prolonged healing process.

Therapeutic contact lenses could be used in several conditions for:
1. Protective agents from epithelial abrasions by blink mechanism.
2. Protective agents for epithelial regeneration.
3. Protective agents against irritation at cornea nerve-endings.

Take Home Message
The health of your eye surface and tear film are very important to your comfort and the clarity of your vision when you are wearing contacts.

Choose an eye care professional who is experienced with contact lenses and with whom you can discuss your needs and expectations. Your eye care professional should diagnose and treat any eye problems that may prevent healthy lens wear and be able to correct problems that arise during lens wear.

You should examine your own motivation for wanting contacts and your commitment to the care and recommended replacement of contacts in order to maintain healthy eyes.
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Surgery for Cataract

Cataract or clouding of lens, causes blurred vision, and if severe enough could lead to blindness. Cataract has become world leading cause of blindness especially in underdeveloped nations. Thus cataract has significant on human health issues, especially related to the eyes.

Most of the cataract related to aging process, with the development of our science and technology in medicine, thus will increase the amount of elderly population. Thus will increase the burden of cataract patients. Besides that, sedentary lifestyle that occurs nowadays also brings health complication such as diabetes mellitus. Diabetes also become a risk factor the development of early cataract


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Brief about Cataract

Introduction
Before talking about cataract, we should look at eye problems first. Talking about eye problems, we should look at eye main function that is for vision.
Decreasing of visual acuity is main concern of eye function, Blindness is form ocular mortality since the eye is non-functioning


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Refractive Eye Surgery

Introduction
Blurred vision is common complaint that seen in eye clinics. There are a lot of cause of blurred vision, one of them is refraction abnormality.
Refractive disease of the eye is the most common cause of blurred vision in mankind. In United States about 120 millions have refraction abnormality


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