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Home > Health Information > E-Newsletters > Diabetes Health 

Diabetes a Risk Factor for Cataracts

Individuals with diabetes are at 60 percent greater risk for developing cataracts than persons who do not have diabetes, experts say. And, diabetics develop cataracts at an earlier age and more quickly than most persons without diabetes.Picture of a woman sitting at a desk

In the month of January, the American Academy of Ophthalmology is alerting persons with cataracts about new advances in treatment during Cataract Awareness Month.

In all, nearly 20 million people in the US suffer from cataracts, a condition where the lens of the eye clouds over, making it difficult or nearly impossible to see. In fact, blurry vision is one symptom of diabetes.

Cataracts are a common symptom of growing old. By age 80, more than half of all Americans either have a cataract or have had cataract surgery, according to the National Eye Institute.

Surgical Advances Improve Treatment

Surgical advances utilizing ultrasonic devices have made it easier than ever to remove and replace a cataract-clouded lens, medical experts say.

Other breakthroughs involving replacement lenses mean patients often end up with better vision than they had before surgery.

Most age-related cataracts develop when protein in the eye's lens begins to clump up, clouding the lens and reducing the light that reaches the retina.

The lens is a clear part of the eye that helps to focus light, or an image, on the retina, the light-sensitive tissue at the back of the eye.

For some people, their clear lens will slowly change to a yellow-brown color, adding a brownish tint to vision. This tint can make it more difficult to read or perform other routine activities.

"Cataract surgery has been one of the areas of medicine that has seen the most tremendous advances," says Dr. Donald Schwartz, an ophthalmologist in Long Beach, Calif., and a spokesman for the American Academy of Ophthalmology.

One of the biggest advances has been the perfection of phacoemulsification, the surgical procedure in which ultrasound waves break up a cataract-ridden lens, Dr. Schwartz says.

In the procedure, a small incision is made on the side of the cornea, the clear, dome-shaped surface that covers the front of the eye. A tiny probe then is inserted into the eye that emits ultrasound waves that soften and break up the lens.

"Then those little tiny pieces are vacuumed out of the eye," says Dr. Thomas Steinemann, an ophthalmologist and associate professor at Case Western Reserve University. "Within a few minutes, the cataract is gone."

After the natural lens has been removed, it often is replaced by an artificial lens, also called an intraocular lens. The lens requires no care and becomes a permanent part of the patient's eye.

Surgery also has been made easier by the creation of synthetic replacement lenses that can be folded, Dr. Steinemann says. These lenses, often made of acrylic or solid silicone, can be placed into the eye through a self-sealing incision as small as an eighth of an inch.

"You can make your incision into the eye very tiny," he says. "It's less invasive, and makes recovery time much shorter." Because the incision is so tiny, sutures usually aren't needed.

Better Vision with New Lenses

Improvements in the lenses also have meant better vision for the people who receive them.

"We want to replace the lens with a lens that acts more and more like our own human lens," Dr. Schwartz notes. "Lenses that will better and better allow people to see at different distances."

Older lens implants provided clear vision for people only at one specific distance. But new so-called multifocal lens implants come closer to mimicking the sight provided by the human eye.

Formed with concentric circles resembling a practice target, the lens allows a patient to shift his or her focus through slight eye movements.

Testing is under way on a further refinement involving a device called a wavefront analyzer. The device measures the way light travels through a cataract patient's entire optical pathway, then compares it to the way light travels through an optically perfect eye.

The information from this device can be used to create lenses crafted to address the specific irregularities of a person's visual system.

"That's still in the testing stages, but it could eliminate some of the distortion that patients complain of," Dr. Steinemann remarks.

Cataract Prevention a Goal

While the advances are reassuring, no one wants to get cataracts in the first place.

For those individuals without the risk diabetes poses, "It's almost inevitable that if you live long enough, you will get cataracts," Dr. Schwartz says. "A common risk for everyone is sun damage from ultraviolet light."

"Cataracts are caused in most people by a lifetime of damage caused by ultraviolet radiation," Dr. Steinemann says. He recommends that everyone - even children - wear good sunglasses with ultraviolet protection when they're out in the sun.

Dr. Steinemann points out that diabetes is a major risk, especially if it is left uncontrolled. According to the American Diabetes Association (ADA), the Diabetes Prevention Program showed that some medications may delay the development of diabetes, but that diet and exercise worked better.

ADA experts say that just 30 minutes a day of moderate physical activity, coupled with a 5 percent to 10 percent reduction in body weight, produced a 58 percent reduction in diabetes.

You also should protect your eyes when necessary, because trauma can spur the early onset of cataracts.

"Wearing eye protection is an easy thing to do, and it's critical," Dr. Steinemann says. He suggests wearing safety glasses or goggles while at work, playing sports, participating in hobbies, or indulging in any activity that causes risk to your eyes.

Finally, smoking also puts you at risk for cataracts, Schwartz said.

"In the center core of the lens, the nucleus becomes harder and more yellow with people who smoke," he says.

Always consult your physician for more information.

January 2005

Diabetes a Risk Factor for Cataracts

Surgical Advances Improve Treatment

Better Vision with New Lenses

Cataract Prevention a Goal

Antioxidants in Leafy, Green Veggies Help

Online Resources


Antioxidants in Leafy, Green Veggies Help

A new study from Ohio State University provides the first lab evidence that certain antioxidants found in dark, leafy green vegetables can indeed help prevent cataracts, according to a study in the Journal of Nutrition.

Vitamin manufacturers often add the antioxidants lutein and zeaxanthin to their products, but until now there has been no biochemical evidence to support the claim that these substances help protect the eyes, says Joshua Bomser, a study co-author and an assistant professor of nutrition at Ohio State University.

Some studies have suggested that these antioxidants boost eye health.

Results from lab experiments on human lens cells showed that lutein and zeaxanthin, antioxidants found in plants such as kale, spinach, and collard greens, helped to protect the cells from exposure to ultraviolet light, a leading cause of cataract formation.

The researchers compared the effects of these antioxidants to vitamin E, an antioxidant also thought to reduce the onset of eye diseases. 

Lutein and zeaxanthin were nearly 10 times more powerful than vitamin E in protecting the cells from UV-induced damage.

"Along with the many environmental, lifestyle, and genetic risk factors associated with cataracts, exposure to ultraviolet radiation from sunlight and oxidative stress appear to be the most relevant in this disease," Bomser says. "Our results are the first to provide physical evidence suggesting that lutein and zeaxanthin decrease damage caused by ultraviolet radiation."

The researchers treated human eye lens cells with varying concentrations of lutein, zeaxanthin, or vitamin E. They then exposed these cells, along with a batch of untreated cells, to doses of ultraviolet-beta radiation for 10 seconds.

Adding lutein and zeaxanthin to the cell cultures provided double the protection from UVB damage. These antioxidants reduced signs of damage by 50 to 60 percent, compared to vitamin E, which reduced the same signs of damage by 25 percent to 32 percent.

The researchers also found that it took far less lutein and zeaxanthin as vitamin E, about 10 times less, to get this protective effect.

"The lens is equipped with antioxidant defense mechanisms designed to guard against the harmful effects of ultraviolet radiation and oxidative stress," Bomser says. "In addition to protective enzymes and compounds like vitamins C and E, we think that low concentrations of lutein and zeaxanthin in the eye lens help shield the eye from the harmful effects of UVB radiation."

What researchers don't know, however, is how these two antioxidants get into the eye. It's what Bomser hopes to learn next.

Always consult your physician for more information.


Online Resources

(Our Organization is not responsible for the content of Internet sites.)

American Diabetes Association

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

Everyday Choices, ADA, AHA, and ACS

HealthierUS.Gov

National Diabetes Education Program

National Diabetes Information Clearinghouse

National Institute of Diabetes & Digestive & Kidney Diseases

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

National Library of Medicine

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