
Retinal damage
Indentificing any retinal damage early is very important to prevent vision loss
Así ve un paciente con daño en la retina avanzado
Drag the central bar to compare before and after


Before
After
- The retina is a tissue that is very vulnerable to changes in the body, largely because it has very thin blood vessels that supply it with nutrients and can be damaged
- Factors such as shocks, high blood sugar levels or increased blood pressure can easily lead to damage that can affect the health of the eyes
- Some of the most common retinal injuries include:
-
- Exudates and hemorrhages: Indicate weakening or rupture of the blood vessel walls
- Detachment: Occurs when the inner layer of the retina separates spontaneously
- Arterial occlusion: interruption of blood flow to the retina due to blockage of a retinal artery

Symptoms
In early stages the lesions may show no symptoms.
As the lesions progress they may present with any of the following:
- “Floaters flotants”
- Blurred vision in visual field
- Shadows or spots
- Poor night vision or sudden vision changes

Risk factors
Advanced age, obesity, diabetes or hypertension, smoking, eye trauma, constant unprotected UV exposure