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What is canaloplasty glaucoma treatment?

< 1 min read

Canaloplasty is a glaucoma surgery that enlarges the eye’s natural drainage canal to improve fluid outflow without creating a full-thickness drainage bleb.

How canaloplasty works

The surgeon threads a microcatheter around Schlemm’s canal, injecting viscoelastic to dilate it. A tensioning suture may be left to keep the canal open and reduce resistance.

  • Designed mainly for open-angle glaucoma
  • Often performed through a superficial scleral flap
  • Does not usually create an external filtering bleb under the conjunctiva
  • Aims for moderate, steady pressure reduction

Advantages and limitations

Canaloplasty preserves conjunctiva for future surgery and has fewer bleb-related complications. However, it may not achieve the very low pressures needed in advanced disease.

  • Recovery can be quicker than with traditional trabeculectomy
  • Suitable for patients needing pressure control but with lower risk profile
  • Some may still require drops or further procedures
  • Success depends on canal anatomy and surgeon experience