Surgery
Wet AMD
Thermal laser photocoagulation surgery is used to treat wet
age-related macular degeneration (wet
AMD). But this surgery is an option for less than one-fourth of people
with wet AMD.4 Whether your AMD can be treated by
laser photocoagulation surgery or other surgery depends on the location and
development of abnormal blood vessels under the retina.
Surgery does not cure wet AMD, but it can sometimes slow down or
prevent further loss of central vision. Without treatment, vision loss from wet
AMD may progress until a person has no
central vision left. Early surgery is vital to slowing
down vision loss, which can be rapid.
By the time many people are diagnosed with wet AMD, it is often
too late for surgery to provide much benefit. Even with treatment, many people
will still go on to lose more of their central vision.
Dry AMD
Currently, surgery is not used to treat
dry
AMD. Laser surgery to remove deposits called
drusen may slow vision loss in people with dry AMD,
but experts think that it may increase the chance of developing wet AMD.
Researchers are currently doing studies to see if this is an effective
treatment.1
Surgery Choices
The only surgical method for treating wet age-related macular
degeneration (wet AMD) is laser surgery, or
laser photocoagulation.
What To Think About
Laser surgery can result in some loss of central vision, because
the laser cannot burn the abnormal blood vessels under the macula without also
burning some of the normal nerve cells in the macula. But while your vision may
be worse right after surgery, it may be less likely to continue to get worse
than if you did not have the surgery.
AMD does not cause the same amount of vision loss in everyone who
develops the disease. It is often hard to know in advance whether laser surgery
will do more harm than good.