Macular Translocation Surgery Treatment Procedure
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Published: Feb. 11, 2008
Updated: Feb. 11, 2008
First Surgery (Macular Translocation Surgery)
- You will be comfortably sedated and able to hear your doctor talking, but you will not feel the surgery.
- If you have a cataract, it will be removed at the beginning of surgery. A lens implant will be placed at the end of surgery or at a future date, if possible.
- The vitreous gel, a jelly-like substance in the eye, will be removed.
- Fluid will be placed under the retina to lift it away from the abnormal blood vessels (creating a retinal detachment).
- The edges of the retina will be cut and the macula moved to a new location. The abnormal blood vessels will be either laser treated or removed.
- The edges of the retina will be laser treated and silicone oil will be inserted to hold the retina in place.
- Surgery lasts about two hours.
- You will have 10 days of special positioning after the first surgery.
Second Surgery (Eye Muscle Surgery)
- The second surgery will be performed eight weeks after the macular translocation.
- A surgeon who is specialized in performing eye muscle surgery will operate on the eye muscles to correct the tilted vision.
- The eye muscle surgery takes about one hour.
Third Surgery (Oil Removal Surgery)
- Three to four weeks after the muscle surgery, you will have a third surgery.
- During this surgery, the retinal surgeon will remove the silicone oil from the eye.
- This is a 30-minute procedure that is done in the operating room.
- No positioning is required after this surgery.
For detailed information about your treatment before, during and after surgery, please review our surgery information sheet (PDF).
