Timing & preparation for the diabetic eye
While it is not the ophthalmologist’s role to manage a patient’s diabetes, there are things they can do to optimise surgical outcomes
Leigh Spielberg
Published: Friday, March 1, 2019
As a vitreoretinal and cataract surgeon, reading “diabetes mellitus” in a medical chart sets all the alarm bells ringing even before the patient enters the examination room. Undesirable scenarios pop into my head: early-onset cataract with suboptimal pupillary dilation, postoperative macular oedema, systemic comorbidities and anticoagulant use...
It always takes a moment or two before I manage to reassure myself that our current, collective knowledge of the ocular complications of the disease is sufficient to manage (or, preferably, prevent) anything we come across these days. But is this true? Can we?
The risks of cataract surgery in the diabetic patient can be divided into the standard surgical complications and diabetes-related complications, the latter of which can be further subdivided into progression of diabetic retinopathy and appearance or worsening of DME.
And although diabetic retinopathy does not seem to worsen due to cataract surgery, diabetes itself is a risk factor for disappointing visual outcomes.
Professor Morten la Cour