Diabetic Eye Exams

Maintaining Your Eye Health

Living with diabetes can make managing your health more complicated, but the team at Specialty Eye wants to help make it a little easier for you.

Our diabetic eye exams take an in-depth look at the health of your eyes and vision. After your exam, our expert optometrists can recommend lifestyle changes or treatments, as needed, to help maintain clear vision and healthy eyes into the future.

Routine diabetic eye exams are crucial to maintaining happy, healthy eyes. Include Specialty Eye as part of your healthcare team today.

Diabetic Eye Conditions

Expert Diabetic Eye Care

Your optometrist at Specialty Eye is an expert in diabetic eye care. This means our team is all-hands-on-deck when it comes to pretesting, taking images of your eyes, and assessing the health of your eyes—inside and out.

Specialty Eye combines state-of-the-art technologies to deliver clear images of your eyes, and our optometrists are highly skilled at interpreting those pictures to provide you with the best care possible.

Diabetic Risks

If you have diabetes, you may already be aware that your risks of developing other health conditions can be heightened. The same can be said for eye diseases and conditions, particularly diabetic retinopathy. High blood sugar levels and/or the amount of time you have had diabetes can increase your risk of developing eye diseases and conditions.

Click through to find out more about how diabetes can affect your eye health.

Diabetic Retinopathy

Your eyes consist of many small, fragile blood vessels. These blood vessels can be negatively affected by increased blood sugar (glucose) levels. Over time, diabetes can cause the fragile blood vessels in your eyes to swell and leak fluid and blood—this is called diabetic retinopathy. When this happens, the retina tissue can swell, resulting in loss of vision.

While properly managing your glucose levels could return your vision back to normal, mismanagement of glucose levels can lead to blindness. Some treatments like injectable medications, laser therapy, and vitrectomy may be available to you if you have ongoing diabetic retinopathy.

Diabetic Macular Edema

When children’s eyes are growing, they can each develop different prescriptions. Uncorrected vision in one or both eyes can lead to amblyopia, which is also called lazy eye. This condition results in a clear image in one eye and a blurry image in the other. Their brain can automatically favor the stronger eye to see objects clearly, neglecting the weaker one.

Amblyopia can be treated at any age with the use of vision therapies and prescription lenses.

Cataracts

Many people will develop cataracts as they age, but having diabetes puts you at risk of developing them earlier in life. A cataract forms when proteins in the crystalline lens of your eye break down, causing cloudiness. Cataracts cause hazy vision, but the early stages can be managed with a change in your glasses prescriptions. Eventually, you may require cataract surgery to replace your natural lens with an artificial one.

Glaucoma

Having diabetes puts you at a higher risk of developing glaucoma—an eye condition typically caused by increased pressure inside the eye. Glaucoma damages the optic nerve (the part of your eye responsible for transmitting images to your brain), working from the outside, peripheral vision inward. Glaucoma may not show signs or symptoms until vision loss has already occurred.

Dry Eyes

Dry eye is the most common eye condition people with diabetes experience. Managing blood-sugar levels can help mitigate the effects of dry eyes, but if your eyes feel scratchy, red, or burning, Specialty Eye can help restore moisture to your eyes. Learn more on our Dry Eye Therapy page.

Ward Off Diabetic Eye Disease

The best way to ensure your eyes are healthy and protect them against diabetic eye diseases is with routine comprehensive eye exams. Book your next diabetic eye exam with the trusted experts at Specialty Eye today.