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Ординатура / Офтальмология / Учебные материалы / Vitreoretinal Surgery Second Edition Springer.pdf
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Diabetic Retinopathy

12

 

Contents

 

12.1

Introduction .....................................................................

269

12.2

Diabetic Retinopathy ......................................................

269

12.2.1

Introduction.......................................................................

269

12.2.2

Diabetic Vitreous Haemorrhage........................................

271

12.2.3

Progression to Vitreous Haemorrhage

 

 

and Tractional Retinal Detachment...................................

272

12.2.4

Diabetic Retinal Detachment ............................................

276

12.2.5

Postoperative Complications.............................................

288

12.2.6

Success Rates ....................................................................

289

12.2.7

Diabetic Maculopathy .......................................................

290

References ......................................................................................

292

12.1Introduction

There are a number of conditions which stimulate neovascularisation of the retina with subsequent complications such as vitreous haemorrhage and tractional retinal detachment from pathological separation of the vitreous. The most common is severe diabetic retinopathy but also retinal vein occlusion, sickle-cell retinopathy and retinal vasculitis.

12.2Diabetic Retinopathy

12.2.1 Introduction

The complications of diabetic retinopathy remain despite major advances in screening of the population and clinical management of patients. Retinal laser photocoagulation is the mainstay of therapy (The Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group 1981; Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Research Group 1991) and reduces the chance of sight loss by 50 %. Even so, the vitreoretinal surgeon is likely to have to treat many patients with diabetic vitreous haemorrhage or tractional retinal detachment with a reported 5 % vitrectomy rate in diabetic retinopathy over 5 years (Flynn et al. 1992). Furthermore, the incidence of diabetes is increasing relentlessly, negating the effects of improved diabetic

control or prompt laser therapy. The increase in the use of PPV for the complications of diabetes is supported by the increased recording of the use of PPV with endolaser photocoagulation by 86 % in Medicare fee data from the USA from 1997 to 2007 (Ramulu et al. 2010).

12.2.1.1 Diabetic Retinopathy Grading

Ischaemic diabetic retinopathy characteristically affects the mid-peripheral retina outside the major temporal vascular arcades and nasal to the optic disc. Neovascularisation generally develops near the posterior limit of the ischemia, that is, at the optic disc and along the major vascular arcades. Vascular tissue, arising from intraretinal venules, grows out through the inner limiting membrane and proliferates within the most cortical part of the vitreous gel as a vascularised epiretinal membrane (ßat new vessels). The vessels do not grow into the central gel except occasionally within CloquetÕs canal. The membranes incarcerate the gel on which they are proliferating, resulting in a vitreoretinal adhesion. The vitreous may stiffen and shrink secondarily to the retinopathy, increasing traction on blood vessels and membranes, or the vitreous may detach, rupturing blood vessels.

Table 12.1 Diabetic retinopathy grading

Grade

Retinal features

No diabetic retinopathy

Nil

Mild non-proliferative

Microaneurysms only

retinopathy (NPDR)

 

Moderate NPDR

More than Ômicroaneurysms onlyÕ and less

 

than severe NPDR

Severe NPDR

Any of the following:

 

More than 20 microaneurysms in each

 

quadrant

 

Venous beading in more than 2 quadrants

 

Intraretinal microvascular abnormalities in

 

more than 1 quadrant

 

No proliferation

Proliferative

Low-risk, ßat new vessels elsewhere

 

High-risk, raised new vessels elsewhere or

 

disc new vessels

T.H. Williamson, Vitreoretinal Surgery,

269

DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-31872-6_12, © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2013

 

270

12 Diabetic Retinopathy

 

 

a

Fig. 12.1 NVD are present on this disc despite PRP

b

Fig. 12.3 See previous Þgure

Fig. 12.2 Retinal neovascularisation requires a scaffold upon which to grow, that is, the vitreous. In the left eye in which the vitreous is present, extensive NVD are seen, whilst in the right eye which has had PPV, there is no structure (vitreous) upon which the vessels can grow (see Fig. 12.3)

Fig. 12.4 Panretinal photocoagulation by pattern scan laser application

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