Services · Vitreoretina
If you have diabetes, hypertension or high myopia, the back of your eye needs watching — because retinal disease caught early is sight saved.
The retina is the light-sensing film at the back of the eye. Disease here — unlike a cataract — can cause permanent vision loss, which is why screening and early treatment matter so much, especially for people with diabetes.
Our approach is simple: screen the at-risk, treat without delay when the picture is changing, and coordinate with your physician — because diabetic eye disease is managed best when sugar, pressure and eyes are managed together.
Spending long hours on screens and worried about your eyes? That's usually digital eye strain, not retinal disease — but a check settles it.
Why Arham Eye Care
Dr. Hemali Doshi — MS Ophthalmology (Gold Medalist), FPRS fellowship at Nethradhama, Bangalore under Dr. Sri Ganesh. 10+ years, 5,000+ surgeries. Full profile.
Detailed on-site diagnostics before any surgical recommendation. We won't suggest a procedure your eyes can't safely take — often the answer is not surgery.
Modular operation theatre with modern surgical platforms, minutes from Ghatkopar station. Most patients are home the same day.
Common questions
Yes — early diabetic retinopathy causes no symptoms at all, and treatment works best precisely at that silent stage. A dilated retina examination at least once a year is the standard of care for every diabetic.
Far less than they sound. The eye is numbed with drops, the injection takes seconds, and most patients describe a brief pressure sensation. The visual benefit in conditions like diabetic macular edema can be substantial.
A few long-standing floaters are usually harmless. But a sudden shower of new floaters, flashing lights, or a shadow/curtain across your vision can mean a retinal tear or detachment — come in the same day; hours matter.
Sometimes partially — swelling can resolve and bleeds can clear — but vision lost to long-standing damage often cannot be brought back. That asymmetry is the whole argument for screening and early treatment.