A standard corneal transplant replaces a damaged cornea with a healthy cornea from a donor. This is the most common type of transplant surgery. Corneal transplants usually occur on an outpatient basis, meaning the patient can go home following surgery. Corneal transplants may be performed for any of the following reasons:
To improve vision by replacing opaque, scarred tissue with
clear healthy tissue
To preserve the cornea for patients with stromal thinning
and descemetoceles, or to reconstruct the eye in case of corneal perforation
To treat corneal swelling, infection or dystrophy
To correct irregular curvature of the cornea (keratoconus/pellucid
marginal degeneration)
To remove inflamed corneal tissue that has not responded
to treatment by medication
The cornea has five layers and all are removed
and replaced with a donor cornea.
In the operating room:
You will receive anesthesia to help you relax
The surgeon will inject numbing medicine behind the eye needing
surgery
Your cornea will be removed and replaced with the donor cornea
16 to 24 stitches are placed to keep the donor cornea in position
The surgery typically takes 60 to 90 minutes to complete. You will wear an eye patch overnight.
Potential benefits of the surgery include (but are not limited to):
Improved vision
Decreased discomfort
Improved functioning in daily activities
Potential risks of the surgery include but are not limited
to:
Glaucoma
Rejection
Astigmatism
Alternatives to the surgery include:
No surgery
Rigid gas permeable contact lenses
You are likely to need glasses or contact lenses to enhance
your vision after surgery. Also, eye drops are used frequently after surgery
and then reduced within an appropriate time frame.