Diabetic Macular Edema

Post on 31-May-2015

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A concise and brief description of basics and pathophysiology of maculopathy in diabetes mellitus and its management

Transcript of Diabetic Macular Edema

DIABETIC MACULAR EDEMA

OVERVIEW• Most common cause of visual loss in DM• Prevelance 11.1% (2-10%)• Incidence (10 year rate: 20.1%; 25.4%; 13.9%)

CLINICAL ASSOCIATONS

• Severity of DR• Duration of diabetes and glycemic control• Proteinuria, • Hypertension, • Dyslipidemia• Pregnancy, • Intraocular surgery• Pan retinal photocoagulation

ANATOMY

ANATOMY

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY

• ALDOSE REDUCTASE• VASOPROLFERATIVE FACTORS• PLATELET DYSFUNCTION

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY

• Capillary damage and raised permeability(breakdown of inner blood retinal barrier)– Pericyte loss (oxidative damage and AGEs)– Disorganisation of tight junctions– Increased transcelluar endocytosis– VEGF– Protein kinase cβ

• Microaneurysms • IRMAs

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY• Extracellular fluid accumulation• Cystoid spaces in the outer plexiform layer• May occupy entire thickness• Tissue disorganisation• Atrophic changes

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY

• Hard exudates (HE):– Lipoproteinaceous deposits– Transudation – Outer plexiform layer

• Subretinal fluid• Subretinal fibrosis

PRESENTATION

• Depends on central macular involvement– Paracentral scotomas– Gradual progressive loss of vision (weeks to

months)– Color vision loss– Metamorphopsia– Fluctuation of vision– Contrast sensitivity– Prolonged adaptation

EXAMINATION

• Clinically best detected by 60 D, 78 D lenses• Decreased translucency• Loss of foveolar reflex• Patterns :– Diffuse– Focal; circinate pattern– Ischemic– Mixed

EXAMINATION

• Stereoscopic fundus photography• Fluorescein angiography– Macular perfusion– Extent and location of capillary leakage

• OCT– Documenting macular thickness– Monitoring progression

CSME

• Retinal thickening at the center of macula• Retinal thickening

and/or adjacent hard exudates at or within 500 u of center of macula• Retinal thickening ≥ 1

disc area, any part of which is within 1 DD of the center of macula

THERAPY

• Medical• LASER photocoagulation• Triancinolone acetonide• Anti-VEGF therapy• Protein kinase c inhibtion• Vitrectomy

LASER photocoagulation

• ETDRS gave conclusive supporting proof• Focal laser for leaking microaneurysm atleast

500 u from the fovea – (aim : closure of leak)

• Grid laser for diffuse retinal thickening/ areas of ischemia – (aim : stimulate retinochoroidal pump)

Treatable lesions

• Focal leaks >500 u from center of macula causing thickening/exudation

• Focal leaks 300-500 u from center if t/t is not likely to damage perifoveal capillary network

• Areas of diffuse leakage• Abnormal avasular zone

ETDRS protocolFocal Grid

Spot size 50-100 u <200u

Exposure time 0.05 – 0.1 s

Intensity Whitening/darkening of microaneurysms (80 - 120

mW)

80 – 180 mW

Number of burns Coagulate all leaking foci All zones of diffuse leakage

Placement 500 – 3000 u from center sparing papillomacular bundle

Sessions 1

Argon green laser (514 nm) and Goldmann 3 mirror lensAvoid argon blue-green (488 nm)Follow up after 4 weeks, if lesions missed then treat after 4 monthsSpacing is one burn width apart

LASER photocoagulation

• Adverse effects– Foveal burns– Subretinal hemorrhage– Vitreous hemorrhage– RPE creep– CNV– Paradoxically increased HE

TRIANCINOLONE ACETONIDE

• Intravitreal route• Needs repeated injections• Duration of effect : 2-3 months with 4mg• Complications – Raised iop– Endophthalmitis– Cataracts

• Peribulbar route

ANTI-VEGF therapy

• Bevacizumab (Avastin)• Ranibizumab (Lucentis)– Fusion proteins with human antibody backbone– Bind all VEGF subtypes– Intravitreal route– No definite schedule

• Pegaptinib (Macugen)– Engineered RNA fragment – Specific sites for VEGF binding

PROTEIN KINASE C Inhibitors

• PKCβ– Ruboxistaurin– Oral administration