Treatment Options

Medications

Medical technology can often times bring miracles. Glaucoma is usually treated with daily eye drops that decrease eye pressure either by slowing the amount of fluid produced within the eye or by improving the flow through the drainage angle. Glaucoma medications may produce side effects, so be sure to talk to your doctor if you experience any unusual symptoms.

Surgery

In a standard, operating room procedure, your doctor can also use fine, microsurgical instruments to create a new drainage channel for outflow of aqueous fluid. Though serious complications of modern glaucoma surgery are uncommon, they can occur. Surgery is recommended if your ophthalmologist feels that it is necessary to prevent further damage to the optic nerve.

Trabeculectomy

BEFORE CONSIDERING THIS TYPE OF SURGERY YOU MUST CONSULT A QUALIFIED OPHTHALMOLOGIST.

Trabeculectomy is a surgical procedure performed to lower eye pressure. By trying to lower the eye pressure, damage can be halted from further pressure increases, but that damage already done is not reversible.

The trabeculectomy procedure involves the surgeon creating a tiny passageway from the inside to the outside of your eye. This helps fluid drain better from the areas it is presently not draining. A trabeculectomy can lower the pressure in your eye and help prevent more damage to the optic nerve.

Trabeculectomy is more commonly used after other treatment options have not been successful or are simply not stopping the increasing intraocular pressure.

  • Medicines do not work as planned
  • Laser surgery to lower the eye pressure has not worked

Laser Surgery

Laser surgery treatments may be recommended for certain types of glaucoma. In open-angle glaucoma, a laser can be used to modify the drain to help control eye pressure.

In angle-closure glaucoma, the laser can be used to create a hole in the iris to improve the flow of aqueous to the drainage angle.

SLT – Selective Laser Trabeculoplasty

Selective Laser Trabeculoplasty is quickly becoming a widely accepted treatment option in glaucoma treatment. SLT offers a new glimpse of hope for glaucoma patients. By engaging in this NEW laser technology, the ophthalmologists can now lower pressure that can possibly help a patient avoid a more invasive surgery. The surgery might even reduce the dependence on medications or drops.

What does the procedure do?

SLT actually lowers intraocular pressure using relatively a small pulsing low-energy laser light to target cells in the trabecular mesh system of the eye.

Page Content Includes: Types of Glaucoma, SLT – Selective Laser Trabeculoplasty, Glaucoma Medications, Trabeculectomy