Sunday, April 19, 2009

New Drug May Help Treat, Reverse Advanced Macular Degeneration
Apr 13, 2009
Reporter: CBS News
Email Address: news@kbtx.com

As the baby boomers age and live longer, a severe sight problem called Macular Degeneration is becoming more common.
But, there are new treatments to help the condition that can lead to blindness.
Sylvia Moore was diagnosed with macular degeneration three years ago.
"If I look straight ahead at somebody's face, I don't see them at all, you'd see a blank spot, a black spot," says Moore of the disease.
Macular Degeneration is most common in seniors.
It happens when blood vessels in the back of the eye start leaking and is the leading cause of blindness in people over 65.
The good news is doctors now have more weapons than ever to fight the condition, and in some cases even reverse it.
When it's caught early, vitamin therapy can slow down the progression of macular degeneration, and in some cases laser surgery can halt vision loss.
But the latest treatment is a drug that's injected directly into the eye.
The medication targets the abnormal blood vessels leading to its shutdown and hopefully to the improvement in vision.
Moore has been getting the injections for three months and is already seeing a difference.
"Its scary when you see a needle coming at you but it doesn't hurt.... I'd rather have that than blindness," Moore says.
A new study predicts some 9 million americans will be diagnosed with macular degeneration next year.
That number is expected to double in the next 40 years.

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