Surgery
Surgery is not always necessary to treat
glaucoma. Medications can often control the pressure
in the eyes, preventing further vision loss and blindness. Medication will
usually be tried first before surgery is considered.
Doctors can use either a surgical cutting tool or a very focused
beam of light, called a laser, to perform surgery for
glaucoma.
Laser surgery is usually tried first when glaucoma
medicines do not lower the pressure in the eyes (intraocular
pressure, or IOP). If laser surgery does not help, your doctor may try
conventional surgery.
Surgery may be needed for:
- Sudden (acute)
closed-angle glaucoma. Laser treatment can create an
opening in the coloured part of the eye (iris) that will let fluid drain from
the eye. People who have had closed-angle glaucoma in one eye usually need to
have laser treatment on the other eye to prevent the same condition from
developing. Also, people who have narrow
drainage angles may need laser treatment to prevent
acute closed-angle glaucoma. If laser treatment is not successful, then
conventional surgery, such as surgical iridectomy or trabeculectomy, would be
needed.
- Open-angle glaucoma, if the pressure in
the eyes stays high or if damage to the optic nerve continues despite
medication. Laser treatment may be needed early on to treat open-angle
glaucoma, especially in people who have very high intraocular pressure and
severe glaucoma. You may have laser surgery before you try medicine. In some
cases, early surgery in open-angle glaucoma may be more effective than eyedrops
at reducing the pressure in the eyes and preventing
blindness.
- Infants with
congenital glaucoma. They may need surgery as soon as
possible to prevent blindness.
The primary goal of surgery for glaucoma is to preserve eyesight
by:
- Maintaining the health of the optic
nerve.
- Reducing the pressure in the eyes by opening blocked
drainage angles or creating a new opening that fluid (aqueous humour) can
flow through to leave the eye.
In some cases surgery may be done to relieve pain caused by
glaucoma.
Surgery Choices
There are three basic types of surgery for glaucoma in adults.
Surgery to increase drainage of fluid from the eye
This type of surgery involves making a trap door that allows
fluid to drain from the eye. The surgeon can use either a laser or a surgical
cutting tool to do this. In severe glaucoma, surgery also may involve putting
in a filtering device (seton), usually made of plastic, that drains fluid away
from the front part of the eye to a place where it can drain out of the eye.
These procedures are used to treat
open-angle glaucoma and long-term (chronic)
closed-angle glaucoma.
- Trabeculectomy
removes a piece of tissue to allow fluid to drain from the
eye.
- Tube-shunt surgery (seton glaucoma surgery) places a
tube in the eye to allow fluid to drain.
- Laser
trabeculoplasty burns tissue to create an opening that allows fluid to
drain from the eye.
- Laser sclerostomy removes a piece of
the white part of the eye to allow fluid to drain.
Surgery to prevent closure of the drainage angle
Both laser and conventional surgeries can be used to prevent
closure of the
drainage angle. These procedures involve making a new
opening in the coloured part of the eye (iris) that allows fluid to flow
through the eye. They are used to treat sudden (acute) closed-angle glaucoma
and will prevent closed-angle glaucoma in people who have narrow drainage
angles. Laser iridotomy can usually be done instead of surgical iridectomy.
However, some people with complicated or severe glaucoma may need to have
surgical iridotomy.
Surgery to decrease the amount of fluid produced in the eye
When other surgery fails to improve the flow of fluid from the
eye, procedures to destroy the part of the eye that produces fluid (ciliary
body) can be done. These procedures are also used when scar tissue has formed
after a previous surgery.
Destroying the ciliary body decreases the amount of fluid
produced in the eye, reducing the pressure in the eye. Procedures that decrease
fluid in the eye are only used for people with severe glaucoma that has not
gotten better after they have tried medications or other forms of
surgery.
Surgery for congenital glaucoma
For congenital glaucoma, there are two slightly different
procedures that both attempt to open the drainage angle directly. They are
equally successful in children, but they are not used for adults. If these
procedures fail in a child, then trabeculectomy or tube-shunt (seton glaucoma)
surgery may be tried.
What To Think About
Medications may be used before surgery to help clear a cloudy
cornea (the clear covering over the front chamber of the eye).
Clouding of the lens (cataract) can
develop after surgery for glaucoma and is one reason that surgery is not
usually used first to treat open-angle glaucoma.
Cataracts may occur in people who also have glaucoma; this
commonly occurs in older people. Surgery to remove the cataract may be done at
the same time as surgery for glaucoma. If
surgery for glaucoma and a cataract are done at the
same time, you may notice improved eyesight after surgery.
The decision whether or not to have surgery is often more
difficult in glaucoma than in many other conditions because:
- In many instances, the person is not in pain
and often does not notice any vision loss.
- Surgery often causes a
person's eyesight to get worse immediately after surgery. Vision may be
affected for weeks or months after surgery. For some people, their eyesight is
never as good as it was before the surgery. Surgery is not a complete cure for
glaucoma. However, surgery can decrease the chance of losing even more eyesight
later on.
- Not everyone who has laser surgery will have lower
intraocular pressure after the surgery. For some people, the lower pressure
will last only a few years. Others may have an increase in their eye pressure.
Certain types of open-angle glaucoma respond better to laser surgery than
others.
- The effects of some laser treatments are not long-lasting.
Repeat laser treatments, medications, or other surgeries may be needed later
on.
As with any other surgery, you and your doctor should make the
decision to operate based on the risks and benefits of having the surgery. One
factor to consider is
which eye should be operated on first. There are other
questions about glaucoma surgery that you should
discuss with your health professional before making a decision.
Procedures to destroy the structures in the eye that produce
fluid (cyclodestructive procedures) are usually used when other treatments,
including other surgeries for glaucoma, have failed.1
Several treatments over time can destroy too much of the ciliary body, causing
too little fluid to be produced. This can cause the eyeball to soften and lead
to clouding of the lens (cataract).