VITREO RETINAL EYE SURGERY
MACULAR DEGENERATION
What is macular degeneration?
If the macula is damaged, the central part of the image is blocked out or blurred, while the image around the blurred area may be unaffected.
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Macular degeneration is a group of chronic diseases which cause breakdown of the macular tissues. It does not cause complete blindness, but can make reading or close work very difficult or impossible.
Although macular degeneration often occurs in older people, age alone is not the only reason for central visual loss. The most common form is called atrophic macular degeneration, and accounts for about 70% of cases. It is caused by thinning or breakdown of tissues in and beneath the macula.

Other types of macular degeneration may be inherited, and often start in youth. Injury, infection or inflammatory conditions may also damage the delicate macula.
If only one eye is affected, the condition is hardly noticeable in the early stages. It may take some time before a patient notices visual disturbance.
Macular degeneration causes different symptoms. Sometimes only one eye is affected, and the fellow eye continues to see well for many years. If both eyes are affected, reading and close work becomes progressively more difficult. Since peripheral vision is usually unaffected, most people can take care of themselves quite well.
Other symptoms include reduced color vision, distortion of straight lines, and empty or dark areas in the centre of the visual field.
Diagnosis
Many patients are unaware of problems until vision becomes blurred. Your
ophthalmologist can detect macular degeneration in the early stages, before
vision is affected. Instruments allowing high magnification and illumination of
the retina are used to see if any damage is present. Additional tests may be
required to determine the nature and extent of the damage. The most important of
these is retinal angiography. High resolution photographs of the retina, macula
and their blood vessels are taken while specific dyes are injected into a vein
on the hand or forearm. These dyes allow detailed study of the integrity of
retinal tissues and blood vessels, and also assist in deciding whether treatment
is possible or appropriate.
Treatment and new developments
At this stage, atrophic macular degeneration is still largely untreatable.
However, it is usually slowly progressive and allows many patients to learn how
to use low vision devices, which assist in applying the remaining side vision
more effectively. New directions in research which hold promise, are
transplantation of pigment epithelium cells, which deteriorate in atrophic
degeneration and are essential for macular function. Macular translocation, a
new surgical procedure, may also be of benefit.
Laser treatment is very useful in cases where abnormal blood vessel membranes
are present under the retina. The laser is used to seal leaking membranes and
destroy abnormal blood vessels. It is mainly intended to prevent further damage,
rather than improve vision, and only certain patients can expect to have
improved vision again.
Surgical excision of membranes under the retina is now performed routinely, with
modest but very promising results.
Electrical stimulation of the eye with pulsed currents, as used in several pain
control devices, is a new field of research which may benefit selected patients.
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is still experimental and not yet commercially
available, but offers hope of significant recovery in a previously untreatable
group of patients. Basically, it consists of injecting an inactive substance
into a vein on the hand or arm. This collects in the abnormal tissues of
subretinal membranes, where it is activated with a low-energy, harmless infrared
laser. Much less damage is caused than with conventional laser techniques when
the fovea, or centre of the macula, is involved. However, further research is
required and long term results are awaited.
The latest and most exciting development is a new surgical technique, called
macular translocation. In this complex operation, the retina is deliberately
detached from the inside of the eye. The macula is then repositioned over an
area of healthier pigment tissues, allowing it to regain function. The eye
itself is also then modified to align the new macular position to the visual
axis, allowing normal straight - ahead vision. Still in its infancy, remarkable
results have been achieved with this technique.
The investigation and treatment of macular degeneration does not fall in the
interest field of all ophthalmologists, due to the challenges involved and
difficulty in treatment. Patients should select an ophthalmologist with a
specific interest in this and other retinal conditions, who is experienced in
the current techniques.
If you are over 50, or if you have a family history of retinal problems, you
should have your eyes examined regularly for signs of problems like macular
degeneration. Early detection and treatment, if required, may help to prevent
severe visual loss.
If you would like to learn more about these conditions, please call our office and schedule a consultation with one of our doctors. If you need more information, please call us on 011 422-1794 or fax 011 422-2809 to make an appointment.