Treatment
Doctors usually treat posterior capsular opacification with a surgery called YAG laser capsulotomy. It's safe and painless and only takes about five minutes.
A laser capsulotomy is a relatively simple, in-office procedure that takes only a few minutes. A laser beam is directed at the cloudy capsule behind the intraocular lens (IOL)and the energy from the laser vaporizes the tissue, restoring clear vision.
Secondary cataract surgery follows these steps:
Your doctor will numb your eyes with eye drops so you don't feel any pain. They might dilate your pupils, too.
They use a special laser to make an opening in the back of your lens capsule. This helps light travel through a clear opening instead of the cloudy capsule.
After surgery, you might need someone to drive you home. The doctor may ask you to use prescription eye drops for a few days.
Your vision should look clear within 24 hours.
The doctor won't need to make any incisions in your eye.
Your eyesight might look blurry for a few hours after your procedure. You may notice more eye floaters, too, but they should get better over time.
Serious complications are rare, but even minor surgeries have risks.
Risks include:
Yes. You can get secondary cataracts again, even after a successful surgery. But it's rare.
The doctor will use the same YAG laser capsulotomy to treat each repeat problem.