Other Treatment
Laser treatment (photocoagulation) can be an effective treatment
for
diabetic retinopathy, but it does not cure the
disease. It can prevent, delay, and sometimes reverse vision loss. Without
either laser treatment or surgery, vision loss caused by diabetic retinopathy
and its complications may progress until blindness occurs. Early treatment is
therefore vital to slowing vision loss, which can otherwise happen quickly.
When diabetic retinopathy causes bleeding (hemorrhage) into the
vitreous gel, extensive scar tissue formation, or
retinal detachment, surgical removal of the vitreous
gel (vitrectomy) may be needed before laser treatment is considered.
Unfortunately, by the time some people are diagnosed with diabetic
retinopathy, it is often too late for treatment to provide much benefit. Even
with treatment, vision will continue to decline.
Early detection of retinopathy through yearly eye exams can provide
the opportunity to have laser treatment when it is most effective.
Other Treatment Choices
- Laser photocoagulation uses the heat
from a laser to seal or destroy abnormal, leaking blood vessels in the
retina.
What To Think About
Laser treatment (photocoagulation) can prevent or delay the
progression of diabetic retinopathy, but it is not a cure.7
- Laser treatment for
macular edema lowers the risk of moderate vision loss
by 20% in people who have mild to moderate diabetic retinopathy.7
- Pan-retinal
laser treatment is used to treat several spots on the retina during one or,
most often, two sessions. It reduces the risk of serious bleeding and the
progression of severe proliferative retinopathy. It also decreases the need for
more invasive surgery (vitrectomy) by 50% in people with
type 2 diabetes and people age 40 and older with
type 1 diabetes who already have severe
retinopathy.7
Laser photocoagulation can result in some loss of vision, because
it destroys some of the nerve cells in the retina. With pan-retinal
photocoagulation, this most often affects the outside (peripheral) vision,
because the laser is directed at that area. Your vision may be worse right
after treatment. But vision loss caused by laser treatment is mild compared
with the vision loss that may be caused by untreated retinopathy.