Diabetic Eye Care

Annual diabetic eye screening is the first step in detection and treatment of diabetic eye disease.

Over 100 million Americans have diabetes or pre-diabetes and many might not even realize it.



Diabetes is a common disease in the United States, and diabetic eye disease is the most common cause of blindness. Regular eye examinations are important in diabetes because eye disease and vision loss caused by it are completely preventable. In diabetes, high sugar levels in the blood damage blood vessels throughout the entire body. Damage to blood vessels in the kidneys can cause kidney failure requiring dialysis. Damage to blood vessels in nerves can cause neuropathy. Your eye also has many blood vessels which can be damaged by diabetes as well.

In particular, high blood glucose levels cause damage to the blood vessels in the retina of the eye. The retina lines the back of your eye like wallpaper and is like the film in a camera; it detects the light entering your eye and turns it into pictures for your brain to see and interpret. When the retina’s blood vessels are damaged, the retina stops working properly, and sight can be lost.

After being exposed to high sugar levels for a long time, the blood vessels in the retina develop some weak spots. These weak spots often pooch out like bubbles along the blood vessels, and these are called micro-aneurysms.

Sometimes the micro-aneurysms rupture, and blood spills into the retina to form small dot hemorrhages. Your retina will eventually clear the blood away, but some debris is often left behind. These clumps of debris are called hard exudates. All together, these changes — micro-aneurysms, dot hemorrhages, and hard exudates — are called background diabetic eye disease.

Most people with diabetes get these small changes in their eyes after having diabetes for 10 years or more. Background diabetic eye disease does not usually cause significant vision loss unless the swelling occurs in the very center part of the retina, called the macula. If you have swelling here, it is called diabetic macular swelling, and it is a common cause of vision loss among diabetic patients. Fortunately this swelling can be treated with in office injections to preserve vision.

Background diabetic retinopathy is a sign that your retina’s blood vessels are sick. If enough of the blood vessels rupture, the retina may not receive enough blood to keep it healthy. In this case, the retina will try to grow new blood vessels to replace the sick ones. Unfortunately, these new blood vessels usually grow in the wrong places. They are fragile, and they break easily, sometimes spilling enough blood to fill up the eye. When these new blood vessels begin to grow, it is called proliferative diabetic eye disease.

Proliferative diabetic eye disease is less common than background diabetic eye disease, but is much more likely to take away some or all of your vision. If it is caught early—before your vision is damaged—proliferative diabetic eye disease can be treated with laser therapy to save your vision. Yet, once the vision is lost, it is very hard to get it back.

Background and early proliferative diabetic retinopathy have no symptoms. The only way to know if you have these changes — and need laser therapy to save your sight — is to visit your eye doctor regularly. Cullom & Farah Eye & Laser Center is happy to work in partnership with your Primary Care Physician to ensure that you receive timely and accurate Diabetic Eye Exams on an annual basis.


Fortunately at Cullom and Farah Eye and Laser Center we have a fellowship trained retina specialist, Dr. Matthew Reed, to diagnose and treat all forms of diabetic eye disease. If one of our ophthalmologists or optometrists detects diabetic eye disease you might be conveniently referred to Dr. Reed for management.


Are you concerned that you have diabetic eye disease? We can help.


Cullom & Farah, located in Williamsburg, VA, has a team of expert ophthalmologists ready to assist you. To schedule a diabetic eye exam with one of our physicians, please call 757-345-3001.

diabetic eye care