It’s All About Your Eyes

Diabetes has become a health concern which has increased during the past 20 years or more. The number of people keeps rising at an alarming rate.  Doctors and researchers are constantly looking for ways to diagnose diabetes as early as possible so that changes and corrections in diet, addition of medication and other factors can be addressed before the disease progresses too far.

There is good news in this area, due to a new device that may give doctors early warning of eye disease, especially vision problems linked to diabetes. 

The device is able to read the eye and capture images that indicate whether or not there is stress in a person’s metabolism.  In addition, it can determine whether there is  tissue damage even before a person has any symptoms of diabetes.  The device measures flavoprotein autofluorescence (FA) which is considered a reliable indicator of eye trouble.

If the retina can be measured to determine whether or not there is a metabolic dysfunction in its tissues, it could help doctors determine if a person has an abnormal metabolism, leading to the diagnosis of diabetes.  By having this test performed,  individuals with diabetes, pre-diabetes or other changes in metabolism that could be leading to diabetes, would be able to be diagnosed – often very early on.  In addition, this unique and cutting edge test could diagnose diabetes and/or its early warning signs, in individuals whose physicians have not yet been able to find the symptoms and make a diagnosis.  This would allow for lifestyle changes and treatment before the disease progressed enough to do significant damage.

In tests involving diabetics and non-diabetics, the device captured the metabolic dysfunction – including higher levels of FA and metabolic dysfunction – in the individuals with diabetes or pre-diabetes who had not been diagnosed yet.  Also, individuals with retinopathy, a disease of the eye which can cause blindness and is associated with diabetes – had significantly more abnormal metabolic readings than those without retinopathy.

Since this testing is much quicker and less invasive or uncomfortable than traditional testing for diabetes, researchers, optometrists and other eye professionals, as well as physicians who are aware of this new test, are hoping that it will become more widely available soon so that it can provide a means of helping diagnose – and slow – the diabetes epidemic that has been rapidly growing during the pas decade or more, by helping individuals find out faster and start treatment before permanent damage is done.

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