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[macular degeneration] | [diabetic eye] | [floaters & flashes] | [faq: macular degeneration] | [faq: diabetic eye] | [faq: floaters & flashes]

Macular Degeneration

 that our muscles are not as strong as they once were. Aging also occurs in the eye; Macular degeneration is one form of aging in the eye. To better understand macular degeneration and how aging can affect your eyes, you must first understand how the eye works.

How The Eye Works

Your eye is a lot like a camera. In the front of the eye there is a clear window called the cornea. The cornea lets light into the eye. The amount of light entering the eye is controlled by the iris, the colored part of the eye. The lens of the eye focuses the light after it enters the eye.

At the back of the eye there is a very important layer of tissue called the retina. The retina covers the inside wall of the eye like wallpaper covers the walls of a room. The retina's job is a lot like film in a camera: it "takes a picture" by turning light into nerve impulses. It then sends the impulses through the optic nerve to the back of the brain where "seeing" actually occurs. Below is a figure which depicts this process.

In the Center of the retina there is a special area called the macula. The macula is responsible for our detailed, straight ahead sight and for most of our color vision. When this special area of the eye begins to age, we call it macular degeneration.

How is Macular Degeneration detected?

When your eye doctor examines the inside of your eye, he or she can tell if you have macular degeneration. The doctor may also perform a special test called a fluorescein angiogram to get more information about your macula. For this test, a special fluorescent dye is injected into the patient's arm. As the dye circulates through the eye a series of photographs are taken with a special camera. The photographs show the exact condition of your macula, whether any new blood vessels are growing under the retina, and the exact location and extent of those new blood vessels.

How is Macular Degeneration treated?

There is no specific treatment for thinning of the retina (atrophic macular degeneration). However, you doctor may be able to prescribe special glasses or magnifying lenses to help you see better, especially for reading. Some doctors also recommend certain vitamins and minerals. If you have developed leakage or bleeding in the macula from new blood vessels (exudative macular degeneration), retina specialist often recommend laser treatment.

What is Laser Treatment?

A laser is a very concentrated light that can be used to cauterize or seal leaking blood vessels. Laser treatments usually causes no pain and are performed in your eye doctors office or outpatient clinic.

Laser treatment is only helpful in certain cases of exudative macular degeneration. Whether laser treatment should be performed depends on the exact location and degree of leakage or bleeding. The fluorescein angiogram test can help your doctor determine whether laser surgery should be used to treat exudative macular degeneration.

If laser treatment is performed, you must see your doctor frequently following treatment to be sure that more blood vessels are not starting to grow. The fluorescein angiogram test to is often performed in each follow-up visit.

Can anything be done to prevent Macular Degeneration?

Although degeneration is part of the aging process of the retina, research by retina specialists has shown that certain vitamins and minerals may slow down this aging and help preserve sight. Other research into the effects of light on the retina suggest that certain parts of light spectrum may be damaging to tissue already weakened by the aging process. Special sunglasses that block the blue end of the light spectrum (ultraviolet light) are often prescribed for patients with macular degeneration.

Finally, retina specialists have found that in exudative macular degeneration, the earlier that leakage and bleeding are detected and treated, the better the chance of preventing loss of sight. Because early detection is so important you should perform a simple test at home each day to check your macula. This test is called the Amsler Grid Test.

What is the Amsler Grid Test?

The Amsler Grid is a series of vertical and horizontal lines forming many small squares.

To use the grid, hold it at a comfortable reading distance - like you were reading a magazine. If you wear reading glasses or contact lenses, be sure to wear them. If you wear bifocals, look through the bifocal section. Be sure to have good, consistent lighting. Test one eye at a time. Close one eye and focus on the spot in the center of the grid. As you keep your eye focused on the spot, notice if:

1. You can see all four corners of the grid square.

2. All the lines on the grid appear straight.

3. All the squares appear perfectly square.

4. There are no missing the areas in the grid.

If there is an abnormal area on the grid and you've never seen an eye doctor, you need an immediate check-up.

06/19/2006
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