Metabolic Cataracts

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Metabolic Cataracts: Overview - Sweet Sight Stealers

  • Lens opacities resulting from systemic metabolic disorders, altering lens clarity.
  • Mechanisms involve:
    • Osmotic stress (e.g., sorbitol pathway in diabetes leading to ↑hydration).
    • Enzyme defects (e.g., galactosemia with galactitol accumulation).
    • Abnormal deposits (e.g., copper in Wilson's disease - 'sunflower cataract').
  • Key associations: Diabetes mellitus (most common), Galactosemia ('oil droplet' cataract), Hypocalcemia (punctate opacities), Wilson's disease.
  • Typically bilateral; may be the initial manifestation of an underlying systemic condition.

⭐ Diabetes mellitus is the most common systemic disease associated with cataract formation.

Pathophysiology of Metabolic Cataracts - Sugar's Hazy Mechanisms

  • Primary mechanisms: Sorbitol pathway, Non-enzymatic glycation, Oxidative stress.
  • Sorbitol (Polyol) Pathway:
    • Excess glucose shunted into this pathway.
    • Enzyme: Aldose Reductase.
    • Reaction: Glucose + Aldose Reductase + NADPH $\rightarrow$ Sorbitol + NADP+.
    • Sorbitol accumulation $\rightarrow$ ↑ osmotic pressure $\rightarrow$ lens fiber swelling, vacuole formation, opacification.
  • Non-enzymatic Glycation:
    • Sugars (e.g., glucose) react with lens crystallin proteins.
    • Forms Advanced Glycation End-products (AGEs).
    • AGEs $\rightarrow$ protein cross-linking, aggregation, ↑ light scattering.
  • Oxidative Stress:
    • Hyperglycemia $\rightarrow$ ↑ Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS).
    • Depletes antioxidants (e.g., glutathione) $\rightarrow$ damages lens proteins & lipids.

Glucose metabolic pathways in metabolic cataracts

⭐ The accumulation of osmotically active polyols like sorbitol (via aldose reductase) within lens fibers is a critical initiating event in sugar cataracts, leading to hydropic lens fiber swelling and opacification.

Diabetic Cataracts - The Sweetest Cloud

  • Caused by ↑sorbitol accumulation via aldose reductase pathway due to hyperglycemia, leading to osmotic changes and lens fiber damage.
  • Two main types:
    • True "Snowflake" Cataract: Acute, bilateral, white subcapsular opacities; seen in young, poorly controlled Type 1 diabetics. Can mature rapidly.
    • Age-related Cataract: Earlier onset and faster progression in diabetics (Type 1 & 2). Posterior subcapsular (PSC) and cortical cataracts are common.
  • Risk ↑ with poor glycemic control (e.g., HbA1c > 7%).
  • Fluctuating vision due to osmotic changes in lens refractive index common before cataract formation.

⭐ True 'snowflake' cataracts are typically seen in young, poorly controlled Type 1 diabetics and can progress rapidly, sometimes resolving with strict glycemic control if early enough.

Other Key Metabolic Causes - Beyond the Sugar

Metabolic Cataracts: Oil Drop, Sunflower, Snowstorm

FeatureGalactosemiaHypocalcemiaWilson's DiseaseFabry DiseaseMyotonic Dystrophy
Cataract TypeOil-droplet (central PSC)Punctate cortical; "Christmas tree"Sunflower (ASC); K-F RingPosterior spoke-like; "Fabry""Christmas tree" (PSC); Stellate
CauseEnzyme defect (galactose metab.)↓ Serum $Ca^{2+}$ATP7B defect (Cu accumulation)α-galactosidase A deficiencyDMPK gene (CTG repeat)
Key SystemicJaundice, hepatomegalyTetany, seizuresHepatic, Neuro (tremor)Acroparesthesia, angiokeratomaMyotonia, muscle weakness

Clinical Approach & Management - Clearing the View

  • Key: Address systemic cause first; surgery for significant visual loss.

⭐ Management of metabolic cataracts primarily involves treating the underlying systemic condition; cataract surgery is indicated for visually significant opacities.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Diabetes Mellitus: Most common; snowflake opacities (acute) or cortical/PSC (chronic) via sorbitol pathway.
  • Galactosemia: Oil-droplet cataract (infants), reversible early; galactitol accumulation.
  • Hypocalcemia: Punctate iridescent opacities (multicolored flecks) in cortex.
  • Wilson's Disease: Sunflower cataract (anterior capsular copper).
  • Myotonic Dystrophy: Christmas tree cataract (polychromatic crystals) in cortex/posterior subcapsular.
  • Lowe Syndrome: Congenital cataracts, microphakia, often with glaucoma.

Practice Questions: Metabolic Cataracts

Test your understanding with these related questions

Intumescent cataract is associated with which type of glaucoma?

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Flashcards: Metabolic Cataracts

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Pigmented nuclear cataract can be due to deposition of _____ pigment

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Pigmented nuclear cataract can be due to deposition of _____ pigment

urochrome

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