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THE CRYSTALLINE LENS IN DIABETES MELLITUS
MAJOR JOHN G. BELLOWS
Arch Ophthal. 1944;32(6):498-507.
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| Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings. |
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The first mention of an ocular derangement associated with diabetes mellitus apparently was made by Blancard in 1688; he described the case of a diabetic girl who became blind just before death. However, destruction of the optic nerve, not lenticular alterations, caused the blindness. Saunders, who in 1798 described the onset of bilateral cataract in a diabetic person, was the first to draw attention to the relation of the two conditions. Subsequently sporadic reports appeared so that by 1854, when His described the microscopic pathology of diabetic cataract, more than a dozen authors had already observed this type (Destouches; Jahn; Berndt; Unger ; Liman ; Himly ; T. G. G. Benedict ; Oppolzer ; His ; Lohmeyer ; Bouchardat, 1846 and 1852; Ruete, 1843 and 1854, and Mackenzie).
Disturbances of the eye in diabetic patients are extremely common. Since ocular disturbances are most frequently seen in persons over 40 years of age, senile changes must always be
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
MEDICAL CORPS, ARMY OF THE UNITED STATES
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