What is a detached or torn retina?
A retinal detachment
occurs when the clear gel (vitreous humor) inside the eyeball cavity pulls away
from its attachment to the retina (the nerve layer that lines the inside of the
eyeball and transmits images to the brain). When the vitreous gel pulls hard
enough to create a tear in the retina in one or more places, fluid can pass
through the tear and underneath the retina, causing the retina to become
detached from the eyewall. Key warning signs are:
- Flashing lights
- New floaters involving
either the central or peripheral vision
- Loss of peripheral
vision
- The perception that a
gray curtain� is moving across your field of vision.
Detached Retina
What is the treatment for a detached
retina?
Retinal detachments are
repaired in the operating room using advanced microsurgical techniques. In some
cases, a detached retina can be repaired with a scleral buckle. A scleral buckle
is a device that is permanently placed around the eyeball to indent the wall of
the eye, bringing the retina back into its natural position flush against the
wall of the eye. In other cases, microsurgical instruments are introduced into
the eye to flatten the retina, usually employing laser and a temporary bubble of
gas to hold the retina in place as it heals. The gas bubble dissolves on its own
over one to two months. In most cases, face-down positioning is required for a
brief period of time in the immediate post-operative period. This process is
known as vitrectomy, because it involves the removal of the natural vitreous gel
from the eye cavity to facilitate gas placement and retinal re-attachment. In
complicated cases of retinal detachment, both vitrectomy and a scleral buckle
can be employed. In cases of limited retinal detachment, a gas bubble alone may
be placed in the eye in the office setting with careful outpatient follow-up.