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Is YAG capsulotomy suitable if OCT is normal?

< 1 min read

Yes. A normal OCT can support the decision to perform YAG capsulotomy, because it shows that the retina is healthy and that PCO is a likely cause of blur.

Why a normal OCT helps

It narrows down the cause of symptoms.

  • No macular oedema, degeneration, or epiretinal membrane seen
  • Blur or glare more likely to arise from capsule haze or refractive error
  • Expectation that clearing the capsule can reveal near‑normal retinal function
  • Useful baseline to compare with future scans if symptoms change
  • Supports counselling that YAG may restore vision close to post‑cataract levels

Other factors still needed

OCT alone does not decide suitability.

  • Symptoms must be significant enough to justify the procedure
  • Slit‑lamp exam should confirm meaningful PCO
  • Refraction should exclude glasses as the main solution
  • General eye health and pressure must be appropriate for laser
  • Shared decision is still essential even with a normal OCT