Retina Blood Vessels Predict Common Fatal Diseases
An anonymous reader writes "LiveScience is reporting that Tien Wong, of the Center for Eye Research Australia at the University of Melbourne, is claiming that abnormalities in the blood vessels of the retina can be used to predict diabetes, hypertension, stroke, and heart disease. These results were the culmination of several large studies. This could go a long way towards advancing medicine in the developed world as these disorders are some of the most common causes of death, hospitalization, and disability."
When I first went to a good eye doctor in 2002, she told me that the retina can tell a lot about a person's general health. She claimed she saved several patients lives when she found cholestorol build up in the vessels of the eye.
Nevertheless this is a good nonintrusive way to diagnose someone.
Microhaemorrhages (bleeds) and aneurysms (a bulging section of a vessel) may be present due to hypertension in the vessels because of diabetic changes to the retinal vessels, or systemic hypertension. Having more blood vessels than usual indicates that the existing ones are not supplying enough oxygen, as will be the case in advanced diabetes. Changes in the macular (the part of the eye that sees most detail) can be apparent if the diabetes is causing problems with vision.
Stroke, heart disease, hypertension and atheroscelerosis are all intimately linked anyway - people at risk of one are often at risk of others. And it's difficult to characterise the changes to a specific cause. But they're still an important thing to look at.
Another time a doctor will look at the retina, is in an emergency situation where the is a blow to the head, they'll look for papilloedema (a swelling behind the retina due to increased pressure inside the skull). This also happens with other causes of high intracranial pressure, such as tumours.
This is text book Chinese medicine. Looking for signs of these things in the face and eyes has a history of about 1500 to 2000 years. I guess it is good that Western medicine has finally come around, but this is far from amazing.
All data is speech. All speech is Free.
Well, checking the ears won't identify "the runs" (diarrhea), but I routinely check patients' ears if they give a history of cough, headache, pink eye, or other head/neck symptoms. This is to help identify nasal congestion, a common cause of head/neck problems. Fluid (normally) produced in the sinuses, middle ear (behind the eardrum, so it can't come out through the eardrum), and eyes (excessive amounts would be called "tears") all normally drain into nasal cavity. If your nose is plugged, then you'd get sinus fluid buildup causing sinus headache, ear fluid buildup causing plugged and sore ears, and failure to adequately lubricate the eyes causing irritation and possibly infection. Furthermore, if your nasal mucus is running down the back of your throat, the "post-nasal drip" can cause a cough that won't go away with cough medicine. But try a decongestant, and the cough medicines will magically start working.
When I look in the ears, I can see whether there is fluid behind the eardrum, and tympanic bulging, which tells me that the eustachian tube (and therefore the nose) is plugged. If it is, then I can predict that the patient will probably have the sinus/eye/cough symptoms mentioned above. So the conversation would be more like:
P: I've got a cough and a headache.
D: Let me look in your ears. Yup, you've got a cough and headache.
By the way, about half my patients don't believe me when I tell them about their nasal congestion, because there's no mucus running out the nostrils, and their nose is unplugged enough so that they can breathe ok. Doesn't mean the eustachian tube's not blocked.
404555974007725459910684486621289147856453481154 in hex is "You sank my Battleship?"
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