*Press Release of PGS.
Bad enough that diabetes is
causing serious lifestyle changes in many Filipinos today. But with the added
risk of permanent blindness, diabetics will surely live a nightmare. Among the
many risk factors for potential glaucoma sufferers, diabetes may just be the
worse.
Considered as the leading
cause of permanent blindness in the Philippines, glaucoma gradually damages the
eyes until only the darkness of blindness is left. It attacks the optic nerves,
which connects the eyes to the brain, and causes shrinking of the visual field
leading to permanent blindness. Common risk factors for glaucoma are eye
pressure, age, previous family injury, chronic steroid use, diabetes mellitus
and race – among these, eye pressure is the most worrisome.
But for diabetics who
day-by-day starts experiencing blurred vision should not get new glasses yet.
Instead, visit your ophthalmologist. Terrible eye diseases like glaucoma,
cataract and retinopathy may be afoot.
Diabetes is a disease,
which results from the inability of the body to produce insulin. Insulin is a
hormone that delivers sugar from blood to cells, which will use it for energy.
Sugar accumulates in the blood in the absence of insulin.
With Diabetes, high blood sugar
levels cause the lens of the eye to swell and therefore changes your ability to
see. It also affects the stability of blood vessels causing a derangement of
blood supply to the retina (the processing film of the eye).
Primary open-angle
glaucoma, a common type of glaucoma, may or may not show symptoms. But symptoms
like headaches, eye aches or pain, blurred vision, watering eyes, halos around
lights and, ultimately, loss of vision are common.
“There is an association
between Diabetes and the development of Primary Open Angle Glaucoma because
they basically affect the same age group. A particular type of glaucoma called
Neovascular Glaucoma may be a direct consequence of Diabetic disease of the
retina” said Dr. Biboy Martinez, one of the country’s leading experts in
glaucoma and the vice president of the Philippine Glaucoma Society (PGS).
Diabetics must visit the
doctor once they experience the following symptoms: black spots in vision,
flashes of light, holes in vision and
blurred vision.
However, whether or not
diabetics are experiencing blurred vision, they should be wary that they are
the most at risk of the dreaded glaucoma.
People with type 1 diabetes
should visit their eye doctors at most three to five years after diagnosis. For
patients with type 2 diabetes, the should pay a visit to their eye doctor
immediately after diagnosis.
Annual eye exams are
recommended for both types of diabetes. Pregnant women must be wary as well if
they have a history of glaucoma. They should get eye exams prior and during
pregnancy.
Treatments for glaucoma in
diabetes can include special eye drops, laser procedures, medicine and even
surgery.
The Philippine Glaucoma
Society with Allergan has launched a series of programs, activities and
awareness campaigns in local and online communities to spread the word on the
adverse effects of glaucoma to its patients and to the country.
Philippine Glaucoma Society
with Allergan brings scientific excellence and rigor in delivering leading
products that addresses glaucoma. Allergan goes beyond providing education and
information. With the highest level of integrity, Allergan helps patients
understand the choices available to them and make well-informed treatment
decisions with their doctors.
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