Laser Therapy for Retinal Conditions

Last reviewed:
February 26, 2026
Social Sharing:

In This Article

What Is Retinal Laser Therapy?

Retinal laser therapy is an in-office procedure in which your retina specialist uses a focused beam of light to treat damaged or at-risk areas of your retina. Depending on the type, the treatment can seal leaking blood vessels, destroy diseased tissue that threatens your vision, or create a permanent bond that prevents a retinal tear from becoming a detachment.

Unlike laser vision correction (LASIK), which reshapes the cornea, retinal laser works on the tissue at the back of your eye. The procedure is performed while you sit at a standard eye exam microscope, typically takes 10–30 minutes, and requires no general anesthesia. The most important thing to understand: laser therapy is primarily a vision-preserving treatment — its goal is to prevent future vision loss, not restore vision already lost.

What Conditions Does Laser Therapy Treat?

  • Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy (PDR) — Panretinal photocoagulation (PRP) treats oxygen-starved peripheral retina to stop the growth of fragile new blood vessels that can bleed and cause retinal detachment.
  • Diabetic Macular Edema (DME) — Focal laser seals leaking blood vessel outpouchings (microaneurysms) in the central retina to reduce swelling; now used primarily alongside anti-VEGF injections.
  • Retinal Tears — Laser retinopexy creates a permanent seal around a tear to prevent it from progressing to a retinal detachment.
  • Retinal Vein Occlusion — Laser reduces the risk of dangerous new blood vessel growth in eyes with significant blood flow blockage.

How Laser Therapy Works

Retinal laser uses different approaches depending on the condition being treated. Your retina specialist will recommend the type that’s right for your situation.

Panretinal Photocoagulation (PRP)

In proliferative diabetic retinopathy, areas of your retina lose blood supply and respond by producing a growth signal (VEGF) that triggers fragile new blood vessels prone to bleeding. PRP treats this by applying tiny laser spots across the peripheral retina, decreasing production of VEGF and causing abnormal vessels to shrink.

Focal and Grid Laser

For diabetic macular edema, focal laser targets individual leaking microaneurysms (tiny blood vessel outpouchings) in the macula, while grid laser covers broader areas of swelling. Both reduce fluid buildup and help the retina return to its normal structure. Today, focal laser is most often used alongside anti-VEGF injections rather than on its own.

Laser Retinopexy (Barricade Laser)

When a retinal tear is diagnosed, laser retinopexy seals it before it can progress to a retinal detachment. Your specialist applies 2–3 rows of laser spots around the tear, creating a thermal bond that matures into permanent scar tissue over 7–14 days. Laser retinopexy successfully seals tears in approximately 90–95% of appropriately selected cases.

What to Expect

Before Your Laser Treatment

Retinal laser is performed in the office — no operating room, no fasting, no IV. For planned treatments, your appointment is typically scheduled 1–2 weeks after evaluation. For retinal tears, laser retinopexy is performed urgently, often the same day or next morning.

  • Take your regular medications as usual
  • Arrange a driver — dilated pupils cause blurred vision for 4–6 hours
  • Plan for 45–90 minutes total, depending on the type of laser

After Your Laser Treatment

The first 24 hours — what’s normal:

  • Blurred vision from dilation — clears within 4–6 hours
  • Mild achiness, light sensitivity, or grittiness — resolves in 1–2 days

Activity restrictions are minimal for most procedures. Return to light activity the next day. After laser retinopexy, avoid heavy lifting and vigorous exercise for 1–2 weeks while the seal matures.

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

  • New flashes of light or a sudden shower of floaters
  • A shadow or curtain moving across your vision
  • Significant worsening pain or vision loss

Follow-up: PRP patients return in 2–4 weeks. Focal laser response is evaluated at 3–4 months. After retinopexy, a 1–2 week follow-up confirms the tear is sealed.

Risks and Side Effects

Your retina specialist will discuss the specific risks relevant to your procedure and condition before treatment.

Common side effects (expected and not dangerous):

  • Blurred vision from dilation — resolves within hours
  • Mild discomfort or headache — resolves within 1–2 days

Rare but serious risks:

  • Progression of a retinal tear to detachment despite laser — occurs in about 5–10% of laser retinopexy cases, usually in larger or more complex tears; requires surgical repair
  • Macular swelling after PRP — can temporarily worsen central vision; treatable with anti-VEGF injections and often prevented by combining PRP with anti-VEGF from the start
  • Vitreous hemorrhage during or after PRP — occurs in 1–5% of cases as abnormal vessels regress; usually resolves on its own over weeks
  • Eye infection — extremely rare after office-based laser (less than 0.1%) since the procedure does not puncture the eye

Perspective on risk: For every laser procedure, the risk of not treating is substantially greater than the risk of treatment. Untreated proliferative diabetic retinopathy leads to severe vision loss, and an untreated retinal tear can progress to a sight-threatening detachment.

Results and Recovery

Laser therapy is a stabilizing treatment, not a restorative one. The goal is to prevent future vision loss, not to improve vision already lost.

For proliferative diabetic retinopathy: Landmark trials showed PRP reduced the risk of severe vision loss by approximately 59%. PRP is typically completed in 1–2 sessions and is essentially a one-time treatment — repeat laser is needed only if new abnormal vessels develop.

For diabetic macular edema: Focal laser reduced the risk of moderate vision loss by about 50%. Today, laser is usually combined with anti-VEGF injections for superior outcomes. Response is assessed at 3–4 months.

For retinal tears: Laser retinopexy seals tears in 90–95% of cases. Once sealed, the repair is permanent. About 5–10% of cases require additional laser or surgical repair.

Recovery is quick. Most patients return to normal activity the next day.

If you have questions about retinal laser treatment, call us at (310) 269-8565 to request an appointment.

Frequently Asked Questions

Most patients describe mild stinging or no discomfort at all. Laser light used can be intense and some patients report light sensitivity during the treatment that rapidly resolves after the treatment is complete. Modern laser technology has significantly improved patient comfort and shortened treatment time.

The laser itself takes 10–20 minutes depending on the type. Plan for 45–90 minutes total, including dilation, preparation and a brief post-procedure check. We recommend you arrange for a driver after the procedure.

Laser therapy is primarily a preventive treatment — its goal is to stop disease progression and preserve the vision you have now, not to restore vision already lost. In some cases, vision may improve slightly as swelling resolves, but this is a secondary benefit, not the primary goal. For conditions like diabetic macular edema where vision improvement is the goal, anti-VEGF injections are typically the first-line treatment, with laser playing a supporting role.

Most retinal laser procedures are one-time treatments. PRP is typically completed in 1–2 sessions. Focal laser for macular edema is usually a single session, with response checked at 3–4 months. Laser retinopexy for a retinal tear is a one-time procedure — once the seal matures, it's permanent. Additional treatments are needed only if the initial treatment is insufficient or new problems develop.

Portrait of Dr. Pradeep S. Prasad, MD, MBA

Dr. Pradeep Prasad, MD, MBA

Vitreoretinal Surgeon, Retina Vision Consultants

Medically reviewed on
December 2, 2025

Portrait of Dr. Kirk K. Hou, MD, PhD

Dr. Kirk K. Hou, MD, PhD

Vitreoretinal Surgeon, Retina Vision Consultants

Medically reviewed on
February 26, 2026

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.

Dr. Kirk K. Hou and Dr. Pradeep S. Prasad of Retina Vision Consultants

Get In Touch

CALL US:
OFFICE HOURS:
Mon–Fri: 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Sat: 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM (by appointment)
Sun: Closed

Related Conditions

Diabetic Retinopathy

Highly specialized care, coordinated with your primary care physician, endocrinologist and medical team, to treat diabetes-related retinal complications and preserve your vision.

Retinal Tears & Detachment

Vision-threatening emergency requiring immediate treatment. We provide same-day care and use the latest technology to optimize successful outcomes.

Retinal Vein Occlusion (BRVO/CRVO)

Blocked retinal veins causing retinal swelling, bleeding and sudden changes in vision. We offer the latest medical, laser and surgical therapies to restore your vision.

Affiliated With

Request an Appointment

Schedule your consultation with our world-renowned specialists. Same-day appointments available for emergencies.

Visit Our Office