Comprehensive Eye Exam

A comprehensive eye exam does more than update your glasses prescription. It checks your eye pressure, optic nerve health, retina,…

Diabetes and the Eye

How diabetes can affect your eyes and vision and what you can do about it, Dr Shibal Bhartiya, fellowship trained eye specialist, explains. Diabetes is a systemic disease that affects many organs, including the eyes. One of the most important complications is damage to the retina, the light sensitive tissue at the back of the eye that sends visual signals to the brain. This damage usually develops slowly and without pain, which is why many patients remain unaware until vision is affected.

Modern diabetic eye care focuses on early detection, risk assessment, and prevention of long term damage. With regular screening and timely treatment, most serious vision loss from diabetes can be avoided.

Dr Shibal Bhartiya is a fellowship-trained eye specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator with over 25 years of experience. Her approach focuses on identifying risk before damage is irreversible, simplifying treatment decisions, and protecting vision long-term. Emphasis on early detection, risk assessment, and continuity of care. She is rated 5 stars across 1,500+ patient reviews on Google.

Known for her structured approach to vision risk assessment and progression analysis, Dr Shibal Bhartiya provides trusted second opinions for patients seeking clarity before major treatment decisions.

How diabetes affects vision

High blood sugar damages small blood vessels throughout the body. The retina depends on these delicate vessels to function properly. Over time, diabetes can cause these vessels to leak fluid, bleed, or become blocked.

When this happens, the retina does not receive enough oxygen. In advanced stages, the eye may try to compensate by forming abnormal new blood vessels. These vessels are weak and unstable and can cause serious complications.

This entire process may begin years before symptoms appear. This is why routine retinal screening is recommended for all diabetic patients.

What are the most common eye problems caused by diabetes

Diabetes increases the risk of several eye conditions including:

• Diabetic retinopathy
• Diabetic macular edema
Cataract at a younger age
Glaucoma

Diabetic retinopathy remains the most important because it is one of the leading causes of preventable blindness worldwide.

Patients with diabetes should also be evaluated for glaucoma because optic nerve damage can occur silently. You can read more about glaucoma risk assessment and early detection in glaucoma screening evaluations.

What is diabetic retinopathy

Diabetic retinopathy develops when retinal blood vessels become damaged due to prolonged exposure to high blood sugar levels.

In early stages, small vessel changes may be visible only on examination. Vision may remain normal. As damage increases, leakage and reduced blood supply can begin to affect vision.

In advanced stages, new abnormal vessels may grow. This stage, called proliferative diabetic retinopathy, carries a higher risk of bleeding and retinal detachment.

Early diagnosis allows treatment before permanent vision damage occurs.

What is diabetic macular edema

The macula is the part of the retina responsible for detailed central vision. When fluid accumulates in this area, it causes diabetic macular edema.

Patients may notice blurred reading vision, distortion of straight lines, or difficulty recognising faces. OCT scanning is often used to detect early fluid accumulation before major vision loss occurs.

Why diabetic patients may develop cataract earlier

Patients with diabetes often develop cataract earlier than non diabetic individuals. Vision may become cloudy and glare may increase, especially while driving at night.

Before cataract surgery, retinal evaluation is important to ensure that diabetic retinopathy is not missed. Sometimes retina treatment may be needed before or after cataract surgery.

Why glaucoma risk increases in diabetes

Diabetes slightly increases therisk of glaucoma, particularly open angle glaucoma. Since glaucoma causes permanent optic nerve damage, early detection is important.

Patients with diabetes may benefit from periodic optic nerve evaluation, visual field testing, and OCT nerve fibre analysis when indicated. Understanding optic nerve risk early helps prevent avoidable vision loss.

More about Glaucoma and Diabetes

Diabetes is associated with a higher risk of glaucoma, particularly primary open angle glaucoma. The exact relationship is complex, but long standing diabetes may make the optic nerve more vulnerable to damage due to vascular changes and reduced ability to tolerate pressure related stress. In addition, diabetic patients may develop secondary glaucomas such as neovascular glaucoma in advanced diabetic retinopathy. Because glaucoma causes silent and irreversible vision loss, diabetic patients should undergo periodic optic nerve evaluation, eye pressure measurement, and visual field testing when indicated. Early detection remains the most effective way to prevent permanent damage.

Who is at higher risk of diabetic eye damage

The risk of diabetic eye disease increases with:

• Duration of diabetes
• Poor sugar control
• High HbA1c
• High blood pressure
• High cholesterol
• Kidney disease
• Smoking

However, even well controlled patients can develop retinopathy. This is why screening is recommended for everyone with diabetes.

Symptoms of diabetic eye disease

Diabetic eye disease often has no early symptoms. When symptoms occur, they may include:

• Blurred vision
• Fluctuating vision
• Floaters
• Dark spots
• Distortion
• Sudden vision drop

Waiting for symptoms is risky because damage may already be advanced. Screening before symptoms appear remains the safest approach.

How often should diabetics get eye screening

Patients with type 2 diabetes should ideally have an eye examination at diagnosis. Patients with type 1 diabetes should begin screening within five years.

After this, yearly screening is usually recommended. Some patients may need more frequent follow up depending on findings.

A personalised follow up plan based on risk is better than fixed routine visits.

What tests are done in diabetic eye screening

A comprehensive diabetic eye evaluation may include vision testing, eye pressure measurement, and dilated retinal examination.

Retinal photography helps document baseline findings. OCT scans help detect macular edema. Visual field testing and optic nerve OCT may be advised if glaucoma risk is present.

A thoughtful risk based approach avoids both missed disease and unnecessary investigations.

How to protect your vision if you have diabetes

Vision protection depends on both medical care and daily habits. Maintaining stable blood sugar remains the most important step. Blood pressure and cholesterol control also play an important role.

Regular exercise, medication adherence, and avoiding smoking improve long term outcomes. Annual retinal screening remains one of the most effective preventive measures.

Patients who maintain stable long term follow up usually preserve better vision than those who seek care only when symptoms appear.

Treatment options for diabetic eye disease

Treatment depends on the severity of disease. Early retinopathy may only require observation and systemic control. Laser treatment may be advised in certain stages to reduce progression risk.

Macular edema is commonly treated with intravitreal injections that reduce fluid and stabilise vision. Advanced disease may require vitrectomy surgery.

The goal of treatment is long term stability and prevention of irreversible damage.

Common mistakes diabetic patients make about eye care

Some common mistakes include:

  • Skipping eye exams because vision seems normal.
  • Getting glasses repeatedly without retina evaluation.
  • Assuming fluctuating vision is always due to spectacles.
  • Seeking care only after vision drops.
  • Not understanding glaucoma risk.

Delayed care is the most common cause of avoidable vision loss in diabetic patients.

When should you consider a second opinion

A second opinion may be useful if:

  • Retinopathy is progressing.
  • Multiple injections are being advised.
  • Vision is worsening despite treatment.
  • Glaucoma risk is suspected.
  • Surgery has been suggested.

A structured risk assessment can often clarify the best long term plan.

Not sure about your diagnosis? You are not alone.

Many patients come to Dr Bhartiya after receiving a diagnosis elsewhere: unsure whether to start treatment, concerned about long-term progression, or simply wanting clarity before committing to a plan.

A second opinion is not a sign of distrust. It is good medicine.

Request a Second Opinion →

Key message

Diabetic eye disease is common but vision loss is often preventable. The most important step is regular screening even when vision feels normal.

Early detection protects future vision. Prevention is always easier than late treatment.

Consultation for diabetic eye evaluation or second opinion

If you have diabetes and want a detailed eye evaluation or a second opinion regarding diabetic eye disease, you may schedule a consultation.

When should a person with diabetes see an eye specialist?

People with diabetes should have a comprehensive eye examination at least once a year, even if vision seems normal. Diabetic eye disease often develops silently and vision may remain clear until significant damage has already occurred.

You should see an eye specialist earlier if you notice:

• Blurred or fluctuating vision
• Difficulty reading
• Dark spots or floaters
• Poor night vision
• Sudden change in glasses number

Early detection is the most important factor in preventing permanent vision loss from diabetes.


Can diabetic eye damage be reversed?

Early diabetic eye changes can often be stabilised if detected in time. Good blood sugar control, regular monitoring, and timely treatment can prevent progression in many cases.

However, advanced diabetic retinopathy may cause permanent damage. This is why regular screening is critical — treatment works best before vision is affected.

Treatment options may include:

• Observation with strict diabetes control
• Laser treatment
• Eye injections
• Surgery in advanced cases

The goal of treatment is usually to prevent further loss rather than restore lost vision, which is why early diagnosis matters.

Why diabetic eye disease is often missed in routine eye exams

Diabetic eye disease may not always be detected during routine vision testing because early damage affects the retina and optic nerve before it affects clarity of sight.

Many patients are told their vision is “normal” because they can read the chart, but this does not rule out early diabetic damage.

Some common reasons diabetic eye disease may be missed include:

• Vision tests only check clarity, not retinal health
• Early disease may not cause symptoms
• Patients may delay dilated retinal examination
• Diabetes duration may be underestimated
• Damage can progress between annual visits

This is why a targeted retinal evaluation is important for patients with diabetes rather than relying only on glasses checks.

Early detection allows monitoring and treatment before vision loss occurs.


Frequently asked questions about diabetes and eye problems

Can diabetes cause blindness?

Yes, uncontrolled diabetes can cause vision loss through diabetic retinopathy, macular edema, glaucoma, and cataract. Regular eye examinations greatly reduce this risk.

Is diabetic retinopathy painful?

No. Diabetic retinopathy usually develops without pain or early symptoms, which is why many patients delay screening.

Does good sugar control protect the eyes?

Yes. Good HbA1c control significantly reduces the risk of diabetic eye disease progression.

Can vision improve after diabetic eye treatment?

Sometimes swelling-related vision loss can improve, but damage from late disease may not fully recover.

Do I need screening if my vision is normal?

Yes. Many patients with diabetic retinopathy have normal vision initially.

Read the research articles

This article was written by Dr Shibal Bhartiya, fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator, Clinical Director at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram, known for ethical, patient-centred glaucoma care and independent glaucoma second opinions. This article was edited in April 2026.

She has published peer-reviewed research on glaucoma management, examining how treatment decisions should balance medical evidence, patient preferences, and long-term vision outcomes.

As Editor-in-Chief of Clinical and Experimental Vision and Eye Research and Executive Editor of the Journal of Current Glaucoma Practice (Pubmed Indexed, official journal of the International Society of Glaucoma Surgery), Dr Shibal Bhartiya brings editorial and research depth to every clinical decision. Her 200+ publications, including 90+ PubMed-indexed publications and 28 edited textbooks span glaucoma biology, surgical outcomes, health equity, and emerging diagnostics.

Her work can be accessed on PubmedGoogle ScholarResearchGate and ORCID.

Dr Shibal Bhartiya
Glaucoma • Second Opinion • Advanced Care

www.drshibalbhartiya.com
 +91 88826 38735

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