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Regression of early diabetic macular oedema is associated with prevention of dark adaptation
Authors:Arden G B  Jyothi S  Hogg C H  Lee Y F  Sivaprasad S
Institution:School of Community and Health Sciences, City University, London, UK. geoffreyarden@aol.com
Abstract:

Hypothesis

Dark-adapted rods consume oxygen at high rates and light adaptation decreases this oxygen burden and can have therapeutic effects on diabetic macular oedema (DMO).

Methods

Patients with mild non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy (DR) and early, untreated non-sight-threatening DMO slept for 6 months wearing masks that illuminated the eyelid of one closed eye by 505?nm light. Exclusion criteria were any concomitant eye disease, DR >ETDRS grade 35, and other systemic diseases. Primary outcome: change of OCT retinal thickness in the local region where oedema was present.

Results

A total of 34 out of 40 patients completed the study. Mean baseline OCT macular cube thickness was equivalent for study and fellow eyes. But study eyes had a greater mean thickness in the central subfield zone 1 (282±53?μm) vs (256±19?μm) the fellow eyes. Twenty-eight study eyes showed intraretinal cysts compared with nine in the fellow eyes. At 6 months, only 19 study eyes had cysts while cysts were seen in 20 fellow eyes. After 6 months, the worst affected ETDRS zone and the central subfield zone 1 reduced in thickness in study eyes only by 12?μm (95% CI 20 to ?7, P=0.01). The secondary outcomes of change in visual acuity, achromatic contrast sensitivity, and microperimetric thresholds improved significantly in study eyes and deteriorated in fellow eyes.

Conclusions

Sleeping in dim light that can keep rods light adapted may reverse the changes of DMO.
Keywords:lightmasks  diabetic macular oedema  hypoxia  dark  adaptation
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