Scleral Buckle Surgery

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URGENT

Retinal detachment is a medical emergency. If you are experiencing new flashes of light, a sudden shower of floaters, or a shadow or curtain across your vision, contact us immediately at (310) 269-8565. Earlier treatment leads to better outcomes.

What Is Scleral Buckle Surgery?

Scleral buckle surgery is an operation to repair a retinal detachment — a condition where the retina separates from the back wall of the eye. Your surgeon places a small silicone band or sponge on the outside of the eye, pushing the eye wall inward to support the retina while a freezing treatment (cryotherapy) seals the tear.

Unlike vitrectomy, which operates inside the eye, scleral buckle works entirely from the outside. The silicone element stays in place permanently — invisible, painless once healed, and providing lasting support.

The question on your mind: is a permanent implant safe? Yes. The buckle becomes incorporated into your eye’s tissue over time. Fewer than 5% of patients ever need it removed.

What Conditions Does Scleral Buckle Treat?

  • Rhegmatogenous Retinal Detachment — Repairs detachments caused by a retinal tear, particularly in younger patients or those with tears in the lower portion of the eye.
  • Retinal Dialysis — A tear at the edge of the retina, often caused by eye trauma. Scleral buckle’s permanent support makes it the preferred repair for this condition.

In complex cases — such as those with scar tissue on the retina or very large tears — scleral buckle may be combined with vitrectomy.

How Scleral Buckle Surgery Works

The procedure has three key steps:

First, the tear is sealed. A cryotherapy probe (freezing) is applied to the outside of the eye over the retinal tear. The freezing bonds the retina to the tissue beneath it, forming a permanent seal over 1–2 weeks.

Second, the buckle is placed. A silicone sponge or band is sutured to the sclera (the white wall of the eye) over the tear. The buckle indents the eye wall inward, relieving traction on the retina and allowing it to settle back into place.

Third, fluid may be drained. If fluid has collected beneath the detached retina, your surgeon may drain it to help the retina reattach more quickly.

One long-term effect to know about: The buckle slightly changes your eye’s shape, causing a permanent shift toward nearsightedness (typically 1–2 diopters). You will need updated glasses once healed.

What to Expect

Before Your Surgery

Retinal detachment is urgent. Surgery is typically scheduled within 24–72 hours of diagnosis — sooner if the macula (central retina) is still attached.

  • Nothing to eat or drink for 6–8 hours before surgery
  • Arrange a driver — you cannot drive home after surgery
  • Plan for 4–6 hours total at the surgical facility (prep, surgery, and recovery)
  • Expect 1–2 weeks off work for desk jobs; 3–4 weeks for physical labor

During the Surgery

Scleral buckle surgery is not painful. Your eye is completely numbed with local anesthesia, and you’ll receive IV sedation to stay comfortable. Most patients are awake but drowsy — you may feel mild pressure, a cold sensation from the cryotherapy, and gentle tugging, but not pain. The surgery takes 1–2 hours.

After Your Surgery

The first 1–2 weeks are the hardest part of recovery. Expect moderate pain and significant swelling — scleral buckle causes more discomfort than vitrectomy because the surgeon repositions the muscles that control eye movement. Pain improves daily with prescribed medications.

What’s normal: Eyelid swelling (peaks at 48 hours, resolves in 1–2 weeks), a red patch on the white of the eye (harmless), temporary double vision, and blurry vision that improves over weeks.

Unlike vitrectomy with a gas bubble, scleral buckle alone typically does not require strict head positioning. You can sleep and move normally.

When to call us immediately at (310) 269-8565:

  • Severe pain that worsens instead of improving
  • A shadow or curtain returning in your vision
  • Sudden decrease in vision
  • Redness with discharge, fever, or pain out of proportion to expected recovery

Follow-up schedule: Day 1, Week 1, Week 2, Week 4, and Weeks 8–12. Your new glasses prescription is typically obtained around week 8–12.

Risks and Side Effects

Your retina specialist will discuss the specific risks relevant to your case.

Common side effects (expected):

  • Pain and soreness — moderate for 1–2 weeks; managed with prescribed medication
  • Swelling and red eye — peaks at 48 hours; resolves over 1–4 weeks
  • Temporary double vision — affects roughly one-third of patients; usually resolves within 2–4 weeks
  • Myopic shift (increased nearsightedness) — permanent; corrected with updated glasses

Rare but serious risks:

  • Re-detachment requiring additional surgery — 5–15% of cases; with reoperation, overall success exceeds 90%
  • Persistent double vision (strabismus) — about 3% of patients need corrective surgery
  • Buckle erosion or infection — very rare (less than 2%); may require buckle removal
  • Scar tissue on the retina (PVR) — 5–10% of cases; may require vitrectomy
  • Intraocular infection — extremely rare (less than 0.05%); requires emergency treatment

Perspective on risk: The risks of surgery are low compared to the near-certain vision loss from an untreated retinal detachment.

Results and Recovery

Scleral buckle is one of the most successful retinal surgeries. In appropriate cases, the retina reattaches after a single surgery 85–90% of the time. With reoperation if needed, the overall success rate reaches 92–98%.

Visual outcomes depend on timing. If the macula was still attached at surgery, 85–95% of patients achieve driving-level vision (20/40 or better). If the macula was already detached, outcomes are more variable — every additional day reduces the chance of full recovery.

Why scleral buckle for certain patients: It preserves the natural lens — avoiding vitrectomy’s higher cataract risk (30–50% over 10 years vs. 5–15% with buckle). This matters most for younger patients.

Recovery timeline:

  • Week 1: Pain improving; vision very blurry; rest and limited activity
  • Weeks 2–3: Pain minimal; swelling resolving; light activity and desk work possible
  • Weeks 4–6: Vision noticeably better; most restrictions lifted; return to exercise and driving
  • Weeks 8–12: Vision approaching final level; new glasses prescription obtained
  • Months 3–6: Final vision stable; complete normal lifestyle

To discuss your treatment options, call us at (310) 269-8565 to request an urgent appointment

Frequently Asked Questions

The scleral buckle is permanent — it stays sutured to the outside of your eye for life. The silicone element becomes incorporated into the surrounding tissue and provides continuous support to the retina. Fewer than 5% of patients ever need the buckle removed. Once healed, patients cannot feel the buckle and are typically unaware of its presence.

The surgery itself is not painful — your eye is completely numbed and you’ll receive sedation to stay comfortable. However, the recovery period involves moderate discomfort for the first 1–2 weeks, more than what patients typically experience after vitrectomy. Pain is managed with prescribed medications and improves steadily each day. By week 3–4, most patients report little to no discomfort.

Almost certainly, yes. The buckle slightly changes your eye’s shape, causing a permanent increase in nearsightedness (typically 1–2 diopters). Your surgeon will check your new prescription once your vision stabilizes — usually around 8–12 weeks after surgery. Updated glasses correct this change completely.

Scleral buckle works from the outside of the eye — a silicone element is placed on the eye wall to push it inward and support the retina. Vitrectomy works from the inside — instruments enter the eye to remove the vitreous gel and use a gas bubble or oil to hold the retina in place. Scleral buckle is often preferred for younger patients because it preserves the natural lens and avoids the higher cataract risk associated with vitrectomy. Vitrectomy is preferred for complex detachments with scar tissue or when the surgeon needs to work inside the eye. Your retina specialist will recommend the best approach for your specific case.

Unlike vitrectomy with a gas bubble, scleral buckle alone typically does not require strict head positioning. You can sleep and move normally. If your surgeon uses a gas bubble as an additional support (less common with buckle), positioning instructions will be provided.

Dr. Pradeep Prasad, MD, MBA

Vitreoretinal Surgeon, Retina Vision Consultants

Medically reviewed on
December 2, 2025

Disclaimer

This information is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your eye care provider or retina specialist for guidance specific to your condition.

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