Cataract Surgery Complications: What to Know - Healthline
Complications can occur during any surgical procedure. With cataract surgery, there are a number of specific complications that will be on your surgeon's radar.
1. Pain
Pain is an expected complication of most surgical procedures. Since cataract surgery involves only the superficial layers of your eye, over-the-counter pain relievers will generally help. If pain persists or worsens, call your doctor. It could be a sign of a more serious complication.
2. Bleeding
Suprachoroidal hemorrhage can occur in people with diabetes, high blood pressure, or other existing conditions after cataract surgery. This complication is rare but requires immediate care to avoid vision loss.
3. Infection
Most procedures carry some risk of infection from surgical tools, the surgeon's technique, or wound care after surgery.
Endophthalmitis is an infection you may experience after cataract surgery. It is rare, though, occurring in
4. New or continued vision problems
In some cases, cataract surgery may not be effective, and you may continue to have vision problems or worse vision after surgery. This is rare, but it's more common in people who had other eye conditions beyond cataracts even before surgery.
Double vision — which is usually temporary — can also occur after eye surgery while your brain adjusts to a new, clearer picture.
5. Floaters
Floaters is the term given to tiny particles of protein or collagen that can cross your field of vision and cast shadows. Floaters don't always need treatment but can sometimes be a sign of a more serious problem.
6. Dry or itchy eyes
As the tissue heals, dryness and itching are common. Your eyes may feel itchy, gritty, or dry. Your doctor may suggest lubricating eye drops to help with this problem. Check with your doctor for when to use eye drops after surgery.
7. Allergic reactions
The use of general anesthesia for cataract surgery is rare, and usually only in pediatric cases. Typically, topical anesthesia delivered by eye drops or local anesthesia with an injection may be used to numb the eye.
Talk to your doctor before surgery if you have any medication allergies.
8. Inflammation
While it isn't viewed as a true complication, but rather an expected result, "cell and flare" is inflammation caused by a slight trauma to the eye after surgery.
When your surgeon makes contact with your eye, a small amount of white blood cells or protein may build up in the front chamber of the eye, creating blurred vision or light sensitivity. This condition is usually temporary and can be treated with topical steroids.
9. Corneal edema
Again, this is an expected result from surgery, but one that may cause concern. Swelling in the cornea can occur anywhere after surgery, but is usually at incision sites. This condition can be treated with topical steroids that will reduce swelling.
10. Increased pressure
Up to half of those having cataract surgery will experience some increase in pressure in their eye after the procedure, but pressure levels usually return to normal within 24 hours.
Ongoing problems with increased or decreased eye pressure after surgery may be related to other eye conditions, like glaucoma.
11. Iris prolapse
In rare cases, surgery could cause trauma to the iris, resulting in a prolapsed iris. This is sometimes related to poor wound closure or healing at incision sites, or long periods of high pressure in the eye.
Sometimes the iris can be repositioned, but another surgery will be required in more extreme cases.
12. Wound leaks
Another rare complication, wound leaks occur when fluid leaks around the incision sites. These leaks are diagnosed with the use of fluorescein dye, and can usually be treated with steroids.
In some cases, your doctor may apply a bandage contact lens or perform corrective surgery to fix the problem.
13. Toxic anterior segment syndrome
Significant swelling and pain in the days after cataract surgery may signal this complication. Toxic anterior segment syndrome is a very rare infection often caused by contaminated surgical equipment or eye drops.
High doses of steroids and pain relievers are used to treat this condition, which can be difficult to differentiate from endophthalmitis.
14. Early acute endophthalmitis
This is another type of infection that causes swelling and pain, and can occur 3 to 7 days after surgery. Steroids don't work to fight this eye infection. It usually requires antibiotics or a referral to a specialist.
15. Retained lens fragments
In some cases, there may be tiny pieces of your natural lens left behind after cataract surgery. These can appear days or even years later in the form of:
- blurry vision
- light sensitivity
- tearing
- redness
If lens fragments are the culprit, they should be surgically removed — ideally by the original surgeon who performed the procedure.
16. Posterior capsular opacification
This is a late complication that occurs in 14 to 60 percent of cataract surgeries. Most common in people who have diabetes or who have had prior eye surgeries, this condition results in the formation of tiny particles trapped in the layer behind the lens.
These particles form tiny clear bubbles called Elschnig's pearls. A procedure called laser posterior capsulotomy can correct this problem.
17. Cystoid macular edema
This is the most common complication of most cataract surgeries and appears up to 8 weeks after the procedure. It occurs in 1 to 2 percent of all cataract surgeries.
Swelling is caused by the buildup of fluid in the eye that can lead to decreased vision. Steroid and nonsteroidal topical treatments are usually used to treat this condition, which can take up to 2 months to resolve.
18. Intraocular lens dislocation
After cataract surgery, there is a chance that the intraocular lens that replaces the natural lens could shift or move. A rare complication, this happens in roughly 0.2 to 3 percent of all cataract surgeries, and frequency has decreased as lens designs improved over the years.
Blurred vision is a common symptom, and this may have to be repaired surgically.
19. Retinal detachment
This is a serious complication that occurs mainly in younger patients who have other eye problems or who have had dislocated intraocular lenses.
Retinal detachment requires immediate medical care.
20. Capsular contraction syndrome
This extremely rare complication occurs in just 0.004 percent of cataract surgeries. The remaining natural lens cells create a fibrous material that contracts, reducing the size of the thin membrane that surrounds the lens.
This problem is usually fixed with tiny incisions to relax the membrane around the lens and create more space.
21. Chronic corneal edema
Improved surgical techniques have reduced this complication from about 1.5 percent in the 1980s to around 0.1 percent today. This complication can result in chronic irreversible swelling of the cornea.
There are a number of risk factors for developing this condition, including a history of Fuchs' dystrophy.
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