Diabetes, now at epidemic levels, can have devastating effects on the eye and vision. Treatments of the ocular complications are currently focused on relatively advanced stages and are limited to the slowing down of the progressive sight-threatening retinal vasculopathy (diabetic retinopathy). Tiny signals from the neural retina have been shown to reveal early diabetic neuropathy prior to vascular retinopathy. These signals, in a clinical test format, are predictive, by precise retinal location, of impending vasculopathy in the retina within a year, including sight-threatening oedema. The discovery opens possibilities for the future development of treatments to prevent the onset of retinopathy and the more sight-threatening retinal oedema and changes patient management strategies. © 2012 The Authors. Clinical and Experimental Optometry © 2012 Optometrists Association Australia.
CITATION STYLE
Adams, A. J., & Bearse, M. A. (2012, May). Retinal neuropathy precedes vasculopathy in diabetes: A function-based opportunity for early treatment intervention? Clinical and Experimental Optometry. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1444-0938.2012.00733.x
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