Diabetic Retinopathy Flashcards
1
Q
What is diabetic retinopathy?
A
A condition where the blood vessels are damaged due to hyperglycaemia
2
Q
What is the pathophysiology of diabetic retinopathy?
A
- Hyperglycaemia damages the retinal small vessels and endothelial cells which causes increased permeability which causes blot haemorrhages and hard exudates (lipid deposits in the retina)
- Damage also causes microaneurysms and venous beading (walls of veins are no longer straight and look like beads)
- Pre-capillary arteriolar occlusion causes retinal infarction: cotton wool spots
- Neovascularisation also takes place
3
Q
What are the 2 categories of diabetic retinopathy?
A
- Non-proliferative
- Proliferative
4
Q
How does non-proliferative present on fundoscopy?
A
Mild: Microaneurysms
Moderate: Microaneurysms, Blot haemorrhages, hard exudates, cotton wool spots and venous beading
Severe: Blot haemorrhages plus microaneurysms in 4 quadrants, venous beading in 2 quadrants
5
Q
How does proliferative diabetic retinopathy present?
A
- Retinal neovascularisation which may lead to vitreous haemorrhage
- Fibrous tissue anterior to retinal disc
- More common in T1DM
6
Q
What are complications of diabetic retinopathy?
A
- Retinal detachment
- Vitreous haemorrhage
- Optic neuropathy
- Cataracts
7
Q
How is diabetic retinopathy managed?
A
- Laser photocoagulation (suppresses new vessels)
- Anti- VGEF medications such as ranibizumab
- Vitreoretinal surgery in severe disease
- Regular opthal review and optimise DM
8
Q
A