Blood leakage into the vitreous humor, the jelly-like material filling the eye’s main chamber, is known as vitreous hemorrhage. A frequent reason for this condition is diabetic retinopathy, where delicate new blood vessels grow on the retina. This hemorrhage typically impairs vision, and in severe cases, the disruption to vision persists until the blood is cleared, a process that may take several months or may not happen at all.