Hi,
I have type 2 diabetic and last month when i had the appointment with the optician she reffered me to the specialist as she found something abnormal with my left eye. when i got the appointment letter i saw it was with the gloucoma specialist. I'm scared now, will it effect the surgery?
Don't be scared. Opticians are very good at detecting the earliest stages of trouble stemming from diabetes or glaucoma. They are really brilliant but they do tend to err on the side of caution.
If you have an appointment with the opthalmologist consultant's team, the procedure is very quick and non-invasive. (The team might be referred to as the Glaucoma team because that is the most common thing the team will be dealing with along with diabetic eye damage)
When you arrive, you will be given a very basic eye test by the nurse and then you will have drops put in your eyes to dilate the pupils so the doctor has a good view inside. They sting a bit but that is the worse thing.
After about 20-30 mins you will see the Dr (or the technician) who will either examine your eyes closely with a little hand-held lens (like the ones a jeweller uses) and/or take a photograph of the back of the eye and/or use a new machine that uses sonar to give a more 3D picture of the back of the eye. (As you are diabetic, you may have had the photographs of the back of your eyes done before - they are quite a regular thing)
One thing that I would say is that you should not drive there because your vision will be ****** for a couple of hours after the drops! (I also tend to feel a bit sleepy for the next few hours - either because of mild anaesthetic in the drops or just because I am a lazy mare!)
I have (slight) diabetic eye damage which they picked up very early - well before I ever noticed it (in fact I still don't notice it at all) It was caused by poor diabetic control then but it hasn't got worse since first diagnosis and they just keep a watch on it and I have an appointment every 6 or 9 months.
If it did start to get worse they would do laser surgery on the eye. This would be day surgery under a local and I think the procedure for glaucoma is similar (OH's grandmother was operated on a couple of times when her glaucoma went completely out of control and she was kept in for a day or so but she was in her 80s and had very poor health)
Do not worry. It is VERY unlikely to affect your surgery (and you would already be unable to see from that eye and/or in excruciating pain from it if they did need to perform surgery on the eye) but you do need to look after your eyes - as a diabetic eye care is one of the most important things to do (if not THE most important thing).
Hope that helps
love
TillyBob