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What happens if you decide to have a corneal transplant?Before surgery The day of surgery The operation is painless. Anesthesia is either local or general, depending on your age, medical condition and eye disease. You will not see the surgery while it is happening, and you will not have to worry about keeping your eye open or closed. The operation The diseased or injured cornea is carefully removed from the eye. Any necessary additional work within the eye, such as removal of a cataract, is completed. Then, the clear donor cornea is sewn into place, and a protective shield will be placed over your eye. After surgery You will need to:
Your ophthalmologist will decide when to remove the stitches, depending upon the health of the eye and rate of healing. Usually, it will be several months, at least, before stitches are removed. What complications can occur?Corneal transplants are rejected about 20% of the time. The rejected cornea clouds and vision deteriorates. Most rejections, if treated promptly, can be stopped with minimal injury. Warning signs of rejection are:
Any of these symptoms should be reported to your ophthalmologist immediately. Other possible complications include:
All of these complications can be treated. A corneal transplant can be repeated, usually with good results, but the overallrejection rates for repeated transplants are higher than for the first time around. Irregular curvature of the transplanted cornea (astigmatism) may slow the return of vision, but can also be treated. Vision may continue to improve up to a year after surgery. A successful corneal transplant requires care and attention on the part of both patient and physician. However, no other surgery has so much to offer when the cornea is deeply scarred or swollen. The vast majority of people who undergo corneal transplants are happy with their improved vision.
Stitchless Corneal TransplantationDSEK (Descemet Stripping Endothelial Keratoplasty) is a new option in corneal surgery. Where previously a full thickness corneal transplantation was needed we now have DSEK. It is offered to patients with persistent corneal swelling due to Fuchs dystrophy, failed corneal transplants, swelling induced by prior eye surgery or the aging process of the eye. In those cases DSEK can substitute traditional corneal transplantation and is performed without sutures. The advantages of this procedure include:
How DSEK is performed:DSEK is performed on an outpatient basis. The procedure is done under local anesthesia and takes approximately 30 minutes. The patient is awake but comfortable. The first part of DSEK procedure involves removal of the unhealthy endothelial cell layer. The second part of the procedure consists of replacing the removed tissue with healthy cells from a donor cornea. In order to make the new tissue adhere to the back of the old cornea, an air bubble is used to fill the front part of the eye for an hour after surgery. A follow-up visit is required the day after surgery. Patients can return to their normal activities within two weeks with the exception of swimming. An antibiotic eye drop is used for two weeks and a steroid drop is used for at least a year to prevent graft rejection. Rejections are rare and treatable.
Laser Corneal TransplantationCorneal transplantation can now be done by laser. IntraLase Enabled Keratoplasty (IEK) is a new revolutionary way of performing full thickness corneal transplantation procedure. The IntraLase laser is used to replace the diseased cornea in a precise fashion thus reducing postoperative astigmatism and corneal surface irregularity speeding up the visual rehabilitation. The IntraLase laser procedure also reduces the need for stitches which in turn makes recovery both easier and faster. |