Detection of early retinal changes in diabetes by vitreous fluorophotometry
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 28 (1), 16-19
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.28.1.16
Abstract
Patients (77) with overt diabetes and with apparently normal fundi on ophthalmoscopy and fluorescein angiography were examined by vitreous fluorophotometry. Breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier, apparently the earliest clinically detectable change in the retina in diabetes, was a constant finding. Quantitative measurement by vitreous fluorophotometry of the breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier could be correlated with degree of metabolic control and previous duration of diabetic disease. Significantly higher vitreous fluorophotometry values, indicating a more marked breakdwon of the blood-retinal barrier, were recorded in patients under poor metabolic control than in patients whose diabetes was under relatively better control. Patients who had had diabetes for longer periods of time showed higher vitreous fluorophotometry values than those recorded in patients with diabetes of shorter duration.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pathophysiology of diabetic retinopathy.British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1978
- Quantitative vitreous fluorophotometry. A sensitive technique for measuring early breakdown of the blood-retinal barrier in young diabetic patientsDiabetes, 1978
- The blood-retinal barriersDocumenta Ophthalmologica, 1976
- The active transport of fluorescein by the retinal vessels and the retinaThe Journal of Physiology, 1967