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Trabeculectomy is a type of surgery to treat glaucoma. It lowers the pressure in your eye. This procedure may be recommended when other treatment has not worked.
The front part of your eye is full of fluid. This is the area in front of the colored part of your eye, called the iris. Normally, this fluid slowly drains out of your eye through a network of tubes. It goes out into your veins.
When you have glaucoma, the fluid may drain too slowly. This can cause the pressure in your eye to increase. This causes increased pressure on your optic nerve. This nerve is important for sending visual information to your brain. If the pressure increases too much, it can damage your optic nerve. This may cause vision loss.
During trabeculectomy, your surgeon makes a new opening for fluid to leave your eye. First, your eye is numbed. Then your surgeon removes a small piece of tissue from the part of your eye where the fluid drains out. This creates a new drain for your eye. This can help reduce the pressure inside your eye. This can help prevent future vision loss.
You might need this procedure if you have glaucoma that you have not been able to control with treatments such as eye drops or laser treatment. Without treatment, people with glaucoma lose their side (peripheral) vision over time. Less commonly, central vision may decrease, too. This can cause blindness.
Your eye doctor (ophthalmologist) might recommend trabeculectomy to help keep your glaucoma from getting worse, but it does not restore vision that has already been lost. Trabeculectomy is a possible treatment for both closed-angle and open-angle types of glaucoma. It's also a possible treatment for primary and secondary types of glaucoma.
Your eye doctor might want to try other treatments first before doing a trabeculectomy. For example, they may want to try eye drops and sometimes pills to lower the pressure in your eye. A procedure called laser trabeculoplasty is also a choice for some people. If these treatments don't work, your eye doctor may recommencd trabeculectomy. Surgical placement of a tube (shunt) is another possible surgery for some people.
Each of these treatment choices has its own risks and benefits. Ask your eye doctor why trabeculectomy may be the most effective treatment for you.
Many people do well with trabeculectomy. But complications from the surgery can sometimes happen. Some possible risks include:
There is also a risk that the trabeculectomy will not be effective. If this happens, you might need a repeat surgery.
Your risks may be different according to your age, your other health conditions, and the specific anatomy of your eye. Talk with your eye doctor about all your concerns. Ask about the risks that apply to you.
Talk with your eye doctor about how to get ready for your trabeculectomy. Ask if you need to stop taking any medicines before the procedure. Follow any directions you are given for not eating or drinking before the surgery.
Your eye doctor may want certain tests before the procedure. These might include:
Talk with your eye doctor about what will happen during your trabeculectomy. In general, you can expect the following:
Ask your eye doctor about what to expect after your surgery. In most cases, you will be able to go home the same day. Plan to have someone drive you home from the procedure.
Follow your eye doctor's instructions about caring for your eye. You may need to take antibiotics to help prevent infection. You may also need other medicines, such as steroids or antifibrotics. You may need to continue to cover your eye for a while after your surgery.
The area may be a little sore after the procedure. But you should be able to take over-the-counter pain medicines as needed. Ask your eye doctor if you should not do certain activities while you recover, and find out for how long.
You will need close follow-up with your eye doctor to see if the surgery was effective. You may have an appointment the day after the procedure. Your eye doctor will need to make sure the new drainage opening is working well.
You will need continued follow-up care to watch how you are doing after your surgery. You may need to have stitches in your eye removed in a follow-up appointment. This will be a few weeks after your surgery. Seek medical care right away if you have bleeding, fever, vision that gets worse, increasing eye pain, or swelling.
Before you agree to the test or procedure, make sure you know: