Surgery performed on the eye or its adnexa From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eye surgery, also known as ophthalmic surgery or ocular surgery, is surgery performed on the eye or its adnexa.[1] Eye surgery is part of ophthalmology and is performed by an ophthalmologist or eye surgeon. The eye is a fragile organ, and requires due care before, during, and after a surgical procedure to minimize or prevent further damage. An eye surgeon is responsible for selecting the appropriate surgical procedure for the patient, and for taking the necessary safety precautions. Mentions of eye surgery can be found in several ancient texts dating back as early as 1800 BC, with cataract treatment starting in the fifth century BC.[2] It continues to be a widely practiced class of surgery, with various techniques having been developed for treating eye problems.
Since the eye is heavily supplied by nerves, anesthesia is essential. Local anesthesia is most commonly used. Topical anesthesia using lidocaine topical gel is often used for quick procedures. Since topical anesthesia requires cooperation from the patient, general anesthesia is often used for children, traumatic eye injuries, or major orbitotomies, and for apprehensive patients. The physician administering anesthesia, or a nurse anesthetist or anesthetist assistant with expertise in anesthesia of the eye, monitors the patient's cardiovascular status. Sterile precautions are taken to prepare the area for surgery and lower the risk of infection. These precautions include the use of antiseptics, such as povidone-iodine, and sterile drapes, gowns, and gloves.
Although the terms laser eye surgery and refractive surgery are commonly used as if they were interchangeable, this is not the case. Lasers may be used to treat nonrefractive conditions (e.g. to seal a retinal tear).[3] Laser eye surgery or laser corneal surgery is a medical procedure that uses a laser to reshape the surface of the eye to correct myopia (short-sightedness), hypermetropia (long-sightedness), and astigmatism (uneven curvature of the eye's surface). Importantly, refractive surgery is not compatible with everyone, and people may find on occasion that eyewear is still needed after surgery.[4]
Recent developments also include procedures that can change eye color from brown to blue.[5][6] Before proceeding with laser surgery, the eye specialist needs to certify that the patient is a suitable candidate for the surgery and there are several factors to be considered before doing laser surgery.[7]
This section needs expansionwith: laser eye surgery for other purposes. You can help by adding to it. (December 2023)
A cataract is an opacification or cloudiness of the eye's crystalline lens due to aging, disease, or trauma that typically prevents light from forming a clear image on the retina. If visual loss is significant, surgical removal of the lens may be warranted, with lost optical power usually replaced with a plastic intraocular lens. Owing to the high prevalence of cataracts, cataract extraction is the most common eye surgery. Rest after surgery is recommended.[8]
Glaucoma is a group of diseases affecting the optic nerve that results in vision loss and is frequently characterized by raised intraocular pressure. Many types of glaucoma surgery exist, and variations or combinations of those types can facilitate the escape of excess aqueous humor from the eye to lower intraocular pressure, and a few that lower it by decreasing the production of aqueous humor.
Canaloplasty
Canaloplasty is an advanced, nonpenetrating procedure designed to enhance drainage through the eye's natural drainage system to provide sustained reduction of intraocular pressure. Canaloplasty uses microcatheter technology in a simple and minimally invasive procedure.
To perform a canaloplasty, an ophthalmologist creates a tiny incision to gain access to a canal in the eye. A microcatheter circumnavigates the canal around the iris, enlarging the main drainage channel and its smaller collector channels through the injection of a sterile, gel-like material called viscoelastic.[clarification needed] The catheter is then removed and a suture is placed within the canal and tightened.[clarification needed] By opening up the canal, the pressure inside the eye can be reduced.[clarification needed][9][10][11][12]
Refractive surgery aims to correct errors of refraction in the eye, reducing or eliminating the need for corrective lenses.
Keratomileusis is a method of reshaping the corneal surface to change its optical power. A disc of the cornea is shaved off, quickly frozen, lathe-ground, then returned to its original power.
Osteo-odonto-keratoprosthesis is surgery in which support for an artificial cornea is created from a tooth and its surrounding jawbone.[17] This is a still-experimental procedure used for patients with severely damaged eyes, generally from burns.[18]
Eye color-change surgery through an iris implant, known as Brightocular, or the stripping away the top layer of eye pigment, known as the stroma procedure[19]
Anterior vitrectomy is the removal of the front portion of vitreous tissue. It is used for preventing or treating vitreous loss during cataract or corneal surgery, or to remove misplaced vitreous in conditions such as aphakia pupillary block glaucoma.
Pars plana vitrectomy or trans pars plana vitrectomy is a procedure to remove vitreous opacities and membranes through a pars plana incision. It is frequently combined with other intraocular procedures for the treatment of giant retinal tears, tractional retinal detachments, and posterior vitreous detachments.
Pan retinal photocoagulation is a type of photocoagulation therapy used in the treatment of diabetic retinopathy.[21]
Ignipuncture is an obsolete procedure that involves cauterization of the retina with a very hot, pointed instrument.[22]
A scleral buckle is used in the repair of a retinal detachment to indent or "buckle" the sclera inward, usually by sewing a piece of preserved sclera or silicone rubber to its surface.[23]
Retinal cryopexy, or retinal cryotherapy, is a procedure that uses intense cold to induce a chorioretinal scar and to destroy retinal or choroidal tissue.[24]
With about 1.2 million procedures each year, extraocular muscle surgery is the third-most common eye surgery in the United States.
Archived 2016-08-18 at the Wayback Machine
Recession involves moving the insertion of a muscle posteriorly towards its origin.
Myectomy
Myotomy
Tenectomy
Tenotomy
Tightening or strengthening procedures
Resection
Tucking
Advancement is the movement of an eye muscle from its original place of attachment on the eyeball to a more forward position.
Transposition or repositioning procedures
Adjustable suture surgery is a method of reattaching an extraocular muscle by means of a stitch that can be shortened or lengthened within the first postoperative day, to obtain better ocular alignment.[29]
Oculoplastic surgery, or oculoplastics, is the subspecialty of ophthalmology that deals with the reconstruction of the eye and associated structures. Oculoplastic surgeons perform procedures such as the repair of droopy eyelids (blepharoplasty),[30] repair of tear duct obstructions, orbital fracture repairs, removal of tumors in and around the eyes, and facial rejuvenation procedures including laser skin resurfacing, eye lifts, brow lifts, and even facelifts. Common procedures are:
Eyelid surgery
Blepharoplasty (eyelift) is plastic surgery of the eyelids to remove excessive skin or subcutaneous fat.[31]East Asian blepharoplasty, also known as double eyelid surgery, is used to create a double eyelid crease for patients who have a single crease (monolid).
Orbital decompression is used for Grave's disease, a condition (often associated with overactive thyroid problems) in which the eye muscles swell. Because the eye socket is bone, the swelling cannot be accommodated and as a result, the eye is pushed forward into a protruded position. In some patients, this is very pronounced. Orbitial decompression involves removing some bone from the eye socket to open up one or more sinuses and so make space for the swollen tissue and allowing the eye to move back into normal position.
Canaliculodacryocystostomy is a surgical correction for a congenitally blocked tear duct in which the closed segment is excised and the open end is joined to the lacrimal sac.[33][36]
An enucleation is the removal of the eye leaving the eye muscles and remaining orbital contents intact.[37]
An evisceration is the removal of the eye's contents, leaving the scleral shell intact. Usually performed to reduce pain in a blind eye.[38]
An exenteration is the removal of the entire orbital contents, including the eye, extraocular muscles, fat, and connective tissues; usually for malignant orbital tumors.[39]
Many of these described procedures are historical and are not recommended due to a risk of complications. Particularly, these include operations done on ciliary body in an attempt to control glaucoma, since highly safer surgeries for glaucoma, including lasers, nonpenetrating surgery, guarded filtration surgery, and seton valve implants have been invented.
A ciliarotomy is a surgical division of the ciliary zone in the treatment of glaucoma.[33]
A ciliectomy is the surgical removal of part of the ciliary body or the surgical removal of part of a margin of an eyelid containing the roots of the eyelashes.[33]
A ciliotomy is a surgical section of the ciliary nerves.[33]
A conjunctivoanstrostomy is an opening made from the inferior conjunctival cul-de-sac into the maxillary sinus for the treatment of epiphora.[33]
Conjuctivoplasty is plastic surgery of the conjunctiva.[33]
A conjunctivorhinostomy is a surgical correction of the total obstruction of a lacrimal canaliculus by which the conjunctiva is anastomosed with the nasal cavity to improve tear flow.[33]
A corectomedialysis, or coretomedialysis, is an excision of a small portion of the iris at its junction with the ciliary body to form an artificial pupil.[33]
A corectomy, or coretomy, is any surgical cutting operation on the iris at the pupil.[33]
A corelysis is a surgical detachment of adhesions of the iris to the capsule of the crystalline lens or cornea.[33]
A coremorphosis is the surgical formation of an artificial pupil.[33]
A coreplasty, or coreoplasty, is plastic surgery of the iris, usually for the formation of an artificial pupil.[33]
A coreoplasy, or laser pupillomydriasis, is any procedure that changes the size or shape of the pupil.[38]
A cyclectomy is an excision of portion of the ciliary body.[33]
A cyclotomy (surgery), or cyclicotomy, is a surgical incision of the ciliary body, usually for the relief of glaucoma.[33]
A cycloanemization is a surgical obliteration of the long ciliary arteries in the treatment of glaucoma.[33]
An iridectomesodialysis is the formation of an artificial pupil by detaching and excising a portion of the iris at its periphery.[33]
An iridodialysis, sometimes known as a coredialysis, is a localized separation or tearing away of the iris from its attachment to the ciliary body.[33][38]
An iridencleisis, or corenclisis, is a surgical procedure for glaucoma in which a portion of the iris is incised and incarcerated in a limbal incision.[33] (Subdivided into basal iridencleisis and total iridencleisis.[40])
An iridesis is a surgical procedure in which a portion of the iris is brought through and incarcerated in a corneal incision in order to reposition the pupil.[33][41]
An iridocorneosclerectomy is the surgical removal of a portion of the iris, the cornea, and the sclera.[33]
An iridocyclectomy is the surgical removal of the iris and the ciliary body.[33]
An iridocystectomy is the surgical removal of a portion of the iris to form an artificial pupil.[33]
An iridosclerectomy is the surgical removal of a portion of the sclera and a portion of the iris in the region of the limbus for the treatment of glaucoma.[33]
An iridosclerotomy is the surgical puncture of the sclera and the margin of the iris for the treatment of glaucoma.[33]
A rhinommectomy is the surgical removal of a portion of the internal canthus.[33]
A trepanotrabeculectomy is used in the treatment of chronic open- and chronic closed-angle glaucoma.[40]
Pfeifer, Wanda L.; Scott, William E. (July–September 2002). "Strabismus Surgery"(PDF). INSIGHT the Journal of the American Society of Ophthalmic Registered Nurses, Inc. XXVII (3): 73. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2003-07-28.
Cherkunov BF, Lapshina AV (1976). "Canaliculodacryocystostomy in obstruction of medial end of the lacrimal duct". Oftalmol Zh. 31 (7): 544–8. PMID1012635.