Retinal DetachmentTreatment OverviewOnly surgery can repair
retinal detachment. It is usually successful and, in
many cases, restores good vision. The most common methods of repairing a retinal detachment
are: - Scleral buckling surgery. Your eye
doctor (ophthalmologist) places a piece of silicone sponge,
rubber, or semi-hard plastic on the outer layer of your eye and sews it in
place. This relieves traction on the retina, preventing tears from getting
worse, and it supports the layers of the retina.
- Pneumatic retinopexy. Your eye doctor injects a gas
bubble into your eye. The bubble floats to the detached area and presses
lightly against the tear, closing the tear and flattening the retina so that no
fluid can build up under it. Your doctor then uses a freezing probe (cryopexy) or laser beam
(photocoagulation) to seal the tear in the
retina.
- Vitrectomy, or the removal of the
vitreous gel from the eye. Vitrectomy gives the eye
doctor better access to the retina to repair holes and close very large tears.
The most common methods of repairing a retinal tear are: - Laser photocoagulation. Your eye doctor
uses an intense beam of light that travels through the eye to make tiny burns
around the tear in the retina. The burns form scar tissue, which prevents fluid
from entering the tear and collecting under the retina.
- Cryopexy (freezing). Your eye doctor uses a probe to
freeze and seal the retina around the tear.
Retinal tears that occur with symptoms (such as
floaters or
flashes of light) are more likely to lead to a
detachment. In these cases, repairing the tear can often prevent detachment.
The decision to treat a tear depends on whether the tear is likely to progress
to a detachment. For more information, see
when to treat a retinal tear. If you have new or sudden flashes or floaters, darkness over part
of your visual field, or a new loss of vision that does not go away, see a
doctor or seek emergency care immediately. Sudden, rapid vision
loss is a medical emergency.
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