death of cells could be quite the bad thing as these cells could sometimes trigger the automated death of nearby cells resulting in a cascade.
This is totally new for me, always with your posts I learn new things, I like this.
I never thought this could happen before. I do know that there is even a clinical situation such as retinal detachment, but healing had never been considered, and it is logical, everything in our body has that capacity to restructure itself.
I have a question. In the case of diabetic patients, the healing of any wound is particularly slower than in people without diabetes. In this case, is the healing process of the retina also affected if it presents any lesion?
Retinal detachment is actually considered and ocular emergency which requires surgery to be done within 24 hours if not permanent vision loss results, the eye cannot heal itself from retinal detachment even if surgery is performed later after the safe period elapses.
And to answer your question, yes please, diabetics also tend to suffer from slow healing when it comes to the eye too, even before complications set in that results in scar formation they tend to suffer from a myriad of ocular issues secondary to their underlying glaucoma condition including, diabetic cataracts formation, diabetic retinopathy, dot and blot hemorrhages, death of optic nerve cells, etc. Diabetes is just a very bad disease...