What You Should Know About Retinal
Detachment
What is a retinal detachment?
The retina lines the inside of the eye like wallpaper. A retinal
detachment develops when the retina pulls away from its normal position.
What are the symptoms of retinal
detachment?
Symptoms of retinal detachment include painless:
- Floaters.
- Flashing lights.
- A curtain of visual loss that spreads across the field of vision.
Vision loss can progress rapidly. Untreated, retinal detachment
usually causes permanent blindness.
What causes a retinal detachment?
Breaks
in the retinal tissue (retinal holes and retinal tears) are normally
found in approximately 10% of people. In a small minority of persons
with retinal breaks, liquid vitreous leaks beneath the retina, separating
it from the eye-wall and causing a retinal detachment.
A sudden
separation of the vitreous from the retina (posterior vitreous detachment)
is often the inciting event causing a retinal break or detachment.
Macular pucker can also develop following a vitreous detachment.
Who gets retinal detachment?
Retinal detachment develops in approximately 1 in 10,000 people
per year. Certain conditions increase the likelihood of retinal
detachment, including acute symptomatic retinal breaks, acute posterior
vitreous detachment, nearsightedness, eye injury, eye surgery, or
a history of retinal detachment in family members. If a person has
a retinal detachment in one eye, there is a 10% chance of eventually
developing a detachment in their other eye.
How is a retinal detachment diagnosed?
Anyone who has sudden flashes, floaters, or peripheral vision loss
needs an urgent examination by an eye doctor familiar with retinal
diseases. A careful dilated retinal examination is necessary to
diagnose retinal breaks or detachment.
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| A billowing retinal detachment surrounds
the macula. |
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The retinal tear (arrow) causing this
detachment is seen in the inferior retinal periphery. |
How are retinal breaks and detachment treated?
1) Retinal breaks.
Asymptomatic retinal breaks in low risk eyes do not require treatment.
Eyes with symptomatic breaks need preventive treatment. High-risk
eyes with asymptomatic breaks are often treated as well. "Gluing"
the surrounding retina with heat (laser photocoagulation) or cold
(cryotherapy) usually prevents retinal detachment from developing.
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White laser photocoagulation spots
surround a retinal tear (arrow). |
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2) Retinal detachment.
Once the retina separates from the eye-wall it must be surgically
pushed back into place; the causative retinal breaks are then "glued"
with laser photocoagulation or cryotherapy. There are several surgical
options available for repairing retinal detachment. Scleral buckling
pushes the "wall against the wallpaper" whereas pneumatic
retinopexy and vitrectomy push the "wallpaper against the wall." Surgery
is usually performed within a day or two of diagnosis, particularly
if the macula and central vision are not yet affected.
- Scleral buckle.
Scleral buckling is an outpatient procedure performed in the operating
room under local anesthesia. A piece of silicone rubber is permanently
sewn to the outside of the eye, pushing (or "buckling")
the eye-wall (sclera) against the retinal breaks. The eye looks
and feels normal following surgery. Scleral buckling successfully
re-attaches in the retina in over 90% of eyes with one operation.
- Pneumatic retinopexy.
Pneumatic retinopexy is a painless in-office procedure for repairing
retinal detachment. After a gas bubble is injected into the eye,
the patient positions their head so the bubble floats up against
the retinal detachment. Once the retina re-attaches, usually within
several days, the causative retinal breaks are surrounded with
laser photocoagulation or cryotherapy.
Pneumatic retinopexy has a 75% success rate following placement
of the initial bubble. Initial failures are primarily due to poor
patient compliance with head positioning or the development of
new retinal breaks. Subsequent surgery (i.e. scleral buckling
or vitrectomy) is usually successful in re-attaching the retina.
- Vitrectomy.
Vitrectomy is an outpatient surgery performed in the operating
room under local anesthesia. The vitreous is removed, directly
eliminating the retinal traction on the causative retinal breaks.
Scar tissue growing over the retinal surface can be removed as
well. The eye is then filled with a gas bubble. This mechanically
pushes the retina back against the eye-wall. Laser photocoagulation
or cryotherapy are then used to seal the retinal breaks. Vitrectomy
surgery has a variable success rate (often over 90%), depending
on the severity of the retinal detachment.
Observe vitrectomy surgery to repair a retinal detachment.
(Click here to view our site's video collection.)
Will my vision improve after retinal
reattachment surgery?
The most important factor predicting final eyesight is the vision
immediately before surgery. If the vision is initially good, successful
surgery generally yields good sight. However, if the central vision
is poor pre-operatively, final vision is often decreased even with
successful retinal reattachment.
Patients usually need to have their glasses changed several months
after retinal reattachment surgery, particularly following scleral
buckling. Final vision may also be decreased by the later development
of a cataract, which often follows vitrectomy surgery. Cataract
surgery is often successful in restoring vision in such cases.
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