Floaters are spots in your vision like black or gray specks strings flying bugs or cobwebs.
Laser eye surgery remove floaters.
Surgery may not remove all the floaters and new floaters can develop after surgery.
This enables precise targeting of the laser beam to break up or vaporize floaters impairing your visual function.
Floaters after cataract surgery are not uncommon and in most of the cases they don t pose any threat to your eye or vision.
In a small fraction of patients they may be a sign of a complication of the cataract surgery itself or a pre existing eye condition which becomes recognizable after surgery.
Prior to this new laser procedure the only way to remove floaters was to undergo invasive eye surgery to remove the vitreous gel and the floaters along with it.
Laser floater removal can be done with minimal risk.
Risks of a vitrectomy include bleeding and retinal tears.
The procedure is quick and painless.
Most patient were told to just live with it because of the risks associated with surgery.
Vitrectomy can be used for the treatment of conditions such as a detached or damaged retina infection inside the eye and serious injury to the eye.
A common laser treatment may help people with a specific type of eye floater according to a small study published online july 20 2017 by jama ophthalmology.
In today s yag laser vitreolysis your surgeon can precisely visualize floaters in relation to your retina and natural lens or crystalline lens if you have had cataract surgery.
The only alternative to laser treatment of floaters is the vitrectomy procedure.
Within this procedure your eye doctor will remove the vitreous through a small incision.
Recovery costs more vitrectomy is a type of eye surgery that removes the vitreous in your eye in order to treat eye problems associated with the vitreous and retina.
Yag laser vitreolysis laser eye floater removal is a highly effective outpatient procedure that involves the use of a nano pulsed yag laser to vaporize eye floaters.
In experienced hands laser treatment of eye floaters is perhaps the safest procedure of intraocular eye surgery.
If patients insist on treatment bensinger said the laser treatment can be a better choice than the more common alternative a vitrectomy which involves removing most or all of the eyeball s.
Food and drug administration when approving yag lasers for this procedure classified this as a non significant risk procedure.
Using a laser to disrupt the floaters.