Wet age-related macular degeneration (wet AMD) is far less
common but much more harmful to a person's vision than dry AMD. Only about 1
out of 10 people with macular degeneration has wet AMD.1 But wet AMD accounts for 9 out of 10 cases of blindness caused by
the disease.2
Doctors may also refer to
wet AMD as neovascular, exudative, or disciform AMD.
Wet AMD often
develops in areas of dry AMD when breaks develop in the deeper layers of the
retina and abnormal blood vessels grow into these breaks (choroidal
neovascularization). The abnormal blood vessels are fragile and leak blood and
fluid under the macula. They also cause abnormal scar tissue to form under the
macula and distort the shape and position of the macula.
- Wet AMD may affect one or both
eyes.
- Vision loss usually develops rapidly.
- Vision loss
is often severe and always permanent.
People rarely go completely blind from the disease, because
it does not affect side (peripheral) vision. But wet AMD can cause a severe or
even a total loss of
central vision. In some cases, treatment may slow down
or delay vision loss, but it is not usually effective over the long
term.