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Glaucoma Surgery

What is Glaucoma?

Glaucoma is a disease that damages the eye’s optic nerve. It can cause blindness if left untreated, though only about half of the estimated three million Americans who have glaucoma know they are affected. Glaucoma generally produces few early symptoms and the disease progresses slowly.

Overview

While glaucoma is often treated with medicated eye drops, sometimes surgery becomes necessary. We perform selective laser trabeculoplasty (SLT), a procedure that uses a low-level energy laser to target specific cells in the trabecular meshwork, the eye’s drainage channels. This stimulates the eye’s draining function, easing the buildup of pressure from fluid.

What to Expect

Glaucoma surgery is an outpatient procedure that generally requires one follow-up exam.

The doctor will put eye drops in the eyes before or after the procedure to decrease fluid and prevent elevation in pressure. A special microscope and lens will guide the laser beam to the canals where fluid drains. The doctor will then make small burns in the trabecular meshwork. While discomfort is usually minimal, some people will feel a heat sensation in the eye.

Complications are rare, but the most common one is an increase in eye pressure. The pressure may be normal after surgery, but it can rise sharply within one to four hours. This can be prevented by using apraclonidine or brimonidine before or after surgery, especially in people with high intraocular pressure.

Other complications may include:

  • Inflammation of the colored part of the eye
  • Clouding of the cornea
  • Blockage of the draining angle
  • Pain
  • Decreased vision

How to Prepare

No preparation is necessary, though mild discomfort may exist temporarily after the procedure.

ACL Repair Ahmed Glaucoma Valve Arthrodesis Arthroplasty Blepharoplasty Blepharoplasty/Eyelid Revision Procedures Bravo pH Monitor Cataract Surgery Colon Cancer Screening Options Colonoscopy Dupuytren's Surgery Endoscopic Carpal Tunnel Release Esophageal Dilation Esophageal pH (acid) Test Eyelid Surgery for Aging Eyes Fecal Transplant Flexible Sigmoidoscopy Gallbladder Procedures Ganglion Mass Excision Gastroscopy (EGD) General Anesthesia Glaucoma Medications Glaucoma Procedures Glaucoma Surgery Hemorrhoid Banding Hemorrhoid Procedures IOLs Infrared Coagulation Intercostal Nerve Blocks Joint Arthroscopy: Knee, Shoulder and Ankle Ligament Repair Minimally Invasive Glaucoma Surgery Monitored Anesthesia Care (MAC) Open Reduction Internal Fixation (ORIF) Peripheral Nerve Blocks Pterygium Surgery Repair of Fractures, Tendons, Nerves Revision of Fingertip Amputation Rotator Cuff Repair Skin Flap Skin Graft Strabismus Surgery Tenosynovectomy Trabeculectomy Traditional Glaucoma Surgical Treatments Trigger Point Injections Upper Endoscopy (EGD) Vitrectomy WATS 3D Endoscopy iStent Glaucoma Surgery With Cataract Surgery
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Surgery Center of Volusia
3635 Clyde Morris Blvd #500 ,
Port Orange, FL 32129

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