| Literature DB >> 26881240 |
Young Gun Park1, Young-Jung Roh1.
Abstract
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a severe sight-threatening complication of diabetes mellitus. Retinal laser photocoagulation, antivascular endothelial growth factors, steroid therapy, and pars plana vitrectomy are now used extensively to treat advanced stages of diabetic retinopathy. Currently, diagnostic devices like ultrawide field fundus fluorescein angiography and the improvement of optical coherence tomography have provided quicker and more precise diagnosis of early diabetic retinopathy. Thus, treatment protocols have been modified accordingly. Various types of lasers, including the subthreshold micropulse laser and RPE-targeting laser, and selective targeted photocoagulation may be future alternatives to conventional retinal photocoagulation, with fewer complications. The new developed intravitreal medications and implants have provided more therapeutic options, with promising results.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26881240 PMCID: PMC4736008 DOI: 10.1155/2016/1753584
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Res Impact factor: 4.011
Summary of current ophthalmic therapeutic options for diabetic macular edema.
| Category | Previous treatment options | New treatments options | Benefits of new treatments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Laser photocoagulation | Pan retinal photocoagulation | Pattern scan laser (Pascal) | It reduces laser-induced side effects |
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| Anti-VEGF agent | Pegaptanib (Macugen) | Anti-VEGF agents plus focal/grid laser therapy | (i) Intravitreal anti-VEGF therapy is generally safer |
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| Steroid | Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide | Dexamethasone sustained-release intravitreal implant (Ozurdex) | (i) It Reduces the frequency of intravitreal anti-VEGF injections |
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| Surgical treatment | Conventional 20-gauge vitrectomy | Transconjunctival sutureless 23- or 25-gauge vitrectomy | It reduced surgery times and makes rehabilitation of patients faster |
Figure 1Diagram illustrating the extent of the seven standard ETDRS fields (the 75° view) on an ultrawide field fundus photo (the 200° view). Ultrawide field fundus angiography of a patient with proliferative diabetic retinopathy with extensive peripheral ischemia and extensive retinal neovascularization at the border between the perfused and nonperfused retinae.
Figure 2Optical coherence tomography (OCT) features of diabetic retinopathy in comparison with a normal eye. (a, b) OCT images in the normal and diabetic eyes obtained using the Cirrus HD-OCT system, respectively. (c, d) OCT images, respectively, in normal and diabetic eyes also obtained using the Cirrus HD-OCT system with the enhanced depth imaging (EDI) technique. (e, f) OCT images obtained using a swept-source OCT (SS-OCT). Note that the signal quality is improved markedly, and the vitreomacular interface and the choroid-sclera junction become clear. (e) The SS-OCT image of normal eye allows enhanced visualization of choroidal thickness (red arrows). (f) The image of a patient with DR showed reduced choroidal thickness.
Figure 3En face optical coherence tomography (OCT) angiography images of the layer segmentation and horizontal B-scan images in a patient with diabetic macular edema. (a) 3 × 3 mm OCT angiogram of the “superficial” inner retina. (b) 3 × 3 mm OCT angiogram of the “deep” inner retina. (c) 3 × 3 mm OCT angiogram of the outer retina shows absence of vasculature. The white represents noise. (d) 3 × 3 mm OCT angiogram of the choriocapillaris. There is black shadowing from the retinal vessels. (e) Full-thickness (internal limiting membrane to Bruch's membrane). (f) Highly sampled OCT b-scan image.