Surgery
Most babies born with a
blocked tear duct will not need surgery. But when
surgery is necessary, a simple probing procedure is used, most of the time.
Probing involves passing a thin wire through the blocked tear duct to open
it.
Probing is usually done in the
doctor's office under a
local anesthetic (numbing eyedrops) for babies younger
than 1 year of age. General anesthesia, which is usually done in an outpatient
hospital setting, can be used for older babies. The doctor is able to evaluate
your baby's tear duct more thoroughly if general anesthesia is used. Also, if
needed, an additional procedure to resolve the blockage often can be performed
at the same time and prevent the need for another surgery later.
For adults, treatment for a blocked tear duct depends on its cause.
Probing is typically not effective in adults, and other surgical procedures are
usually used.
Other types of surgery for a blocked tear duct in babies or adults
may include breaking a nasal bone, placing a tube in the tear duct, or
surgically creating a new tear duct.
Surgery Choices
Surgical options for a blocked tear duct include:
- Probing, which involves passing a thin
wire through the blocked tear duct to open it. Probing has been shown to
successfully open the tear duct in 97% of babies who are 13 months of age or
younger.3
Should my baby have a probing procedure to
open a blocked tear duct?
- Intubation, which involves placing a
silicone tube through the tear duct to maintain a passageway for tears to drain
into the nostril. This may be done if the duct has excessive scarring or if it
is difficult to pass the probe through the duct. Intubation may also be needed
if probing is being repeated because a previous probing failed to open the tear
duct.
- Infracturing, in which a nasal bone deep within the
nose is broken to create an open duct and improve a passageway into the
nostril. Infracturing will not permanently affect the size or shape of a baby's
nose.
- Balloon dacryocystoplasty, in which a tiny balloon at
the end of a probe is used to open the tear duct.
Surgical options that are rarely used for children—and only after
the above procedures have failed—include:
In adults, treatment for a blocked tear duct depends on the cause
of the blockage and can include any of the above choices.
What To Think About
About 6 weeks after a surgical treatment, you or your child will
usually visit the doctor for an eye exam and may be tested again with the
fluorescein dye disappearance test.