Pediatric Eye Surgery in Ranchi — Children's Eye Care
Specialized eye surgery for infants and children — squint correction, congenital cataract removal, blocked tear ducts, and ptosis repair — performed by Dr. Dibya Prabha, MS Ophthalmology, at Neurovision Clinic, Ranchi.
What is Pediatric Eye Surgery?
Pediatric eye surgery encompasses a range of surgical procedures performed on infants, children, and adolescents to correct eye conditions that threaten vision development, ocular alignment, or eye health. Children's eyes are not simply smaller versions of adult eyes — the developing visual system imposes unique urgency, as conditions like congenital cataract, uncorrected refractive errors, and strabismus (misaligned eyes) can cause amblyopia (lazy eye) if not treated during the critical period of visual development (birth to approximately 8–10 years). Pediatric eye surgeries at Neurovision Clinic, Ranchi include: strabismus surgery (squint correction) to realign the eye muscles, congenital cataract surgery with or without intraocular lens implantation, probing and syringing for congenital nasolacrimal duct obstruction (blocked tear duct), ptosis surgery (drooping eyelid repair) when the eyelid obstructs vision, and examination under anaesthesia (EUA) for children who cannot cooperate with in-clinic examination.
Dr. Dibya Prabha (MS Ophthalmology) has extensive experience managing pediatric eye conditions and works closely with parents to ensure the surgical plan, anaesthesia safety, and post-operative care are clearly understood. All pediatric procedures are performed in a facility with paediatric anaesthesia capability.
Why is Pediatric Eye Surgery Done?
- •To remove a congenital or developmental cataract that blocks light from reaching the retina — untreated, it causes irreversible deprivation amblyopia; surgery should be performed urgently (within weeks for congenital cataracts present at birth)
- •To correct strabismus (squint, crossed eyes, wall eyes) when glasses, patching, or prism therapy is insufficient — strabismus surgery repositions the extraocular muscles to restore proper eye alignment and binocular function
- •To relieve congenital nasolacrimal duct obstruction (blocked tear duct) when the membrane at the distal end of the tear duct fails to open spontaneously — causing persistent tearing, mucous discharge, and recurrent infections; probing and syringing is typically performed after 12 months of age if conservative massage and antibiotic drops have failed
- •To repair congenital or acquired ptosis (drooping eyelid) when the eyelid margin covers the pupil and obstructs the visual axis, risking amblyopia — levator resection or frontalis sling surgery is performed depending on levator muscle function
- •To perform an examination under anaesthesia (EUA) with fundus examination, refraction, intraocular pressure measurement, and corneal diameter measurement in children who cannot cooperate for an in-clinic evaluation — especially for suspected retinoblastoma, uveitis, or glaucoma
- •To remove corneal or conjunctival foreign bodies, repair eyelid lacerations, or treat ocular trauma in children under controlled conditions
How Pediatric Eye Surgery is Performed
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Pre-operative Assessment and Anaesthesia Planning
Dr. Dibya Prabha performs a detailed eye examination appropriate for the child's age — including visual acuity assessment (age-appropriate charts, preferential looking tests), cycloplegic refraction, ocular motility evaluation, slit-lamp examination, and dilated fundus examination. The paediatric anaesthesia team separately evaluates the child's fitness for general anaesthesia (virtually all pediatric eye surgeries are performed under GA). Parents are counselled about the procedure, risks, and post-operative care.
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Anaesthesia and Sterile Preparation
The child is placed under general anaesthesia by a paediatric anaesthesiologist. Once the child is asleep and stable, the eye is cleaned with povidone-iodine and draped. The eyelid is held open with a speculum. For strabismus surgery, both eyes are usually prepared even if only one eye is operated on, as intraoperative alignment assessment requires access to both eyes.
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Surgical Procedure
The specific surgical steps vary by the condition being treated. For strabismus surgery: the conjunctiva is opened, the relevant extraocular muscle is isolated on a muscle hook, and the muscle is either recessed (weakened by reattaching it further back on the sclera) or resected (strengthened by removing a segment). For congenital cataract surgery: a small corneal incision is made, the anterior lens capsule is opened, the cloudy lens material is aspirated, and an intraocular lens is placed (in children over 1–2 years). For blocked tear duct probing: a fine probe is passed through the punctum and canaliculus into the nasolacrimal duct to open the obstructing membrane.
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Wound Closure and Subconjunctival Injections
Depending on the procedure, incisions are closed with absorbable sutures (for conjunctival incisions in strabismus surgery) or are self-sealing (for small corneal incisions in cataract surgery). Antibiotic and steroid medications are injected under the conjunctiva to provide sustained post-operative cover. The eye is not routinely patched after strabismus surgery; a protective shield may be applied.
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Recovery and Post-operative Instructions
The child is monitored in the recovery room until awake and stable. Mild nausea from anaesthesia is common. Discharge occurs the same day for most routine procedures, with detailed written instructions for parents covering eye drop schedules, activity restrictions (avoid water in the eyes, no swimming, no rubbing), warning signs to watch for, and the first follow-up appointment (typically the next day or within 48–72 hours). Dr. Prabha remains available on phone for parents post-operatively.
How to Prepare
- •Bring all previous eye examination reports, spectacles, patching logs, and any imaging (OCT, fundus photos, ultrasound) to the pre-operative consultation
- •Follow the fasting instructions provided by the anaesthesia team strictly — typically no solid food for 6 hours and no clear liquids for 2 hours (breast milk 4 hours) before the procedure for infants and children
- •Inform Dr. Prabha of all the child's systemic conditions, medications, allergies, and previous anaesthesia experiences — children with congenital heart disease, neurological conditions, or genetic syndromes may need additional pre-operative workup
- •Prepare your child psychologically — use age-appropriate explanations about the procedure, bring a comfort item (favorite toy, blanket) to the clinic, and stay calm yourself as children pick up on parental anxiety
- •Plan for post-operative care — stock the prescribed eye drops and ointments in advance, arrange for a parent or caregiver to be available full-time for the first 2–3 days, and set up a comfortable recovery space at home
- •Understand that patching therapy may need to continue after strabismus surgery for amblyopia management — surgery aligns the eyes but does not replace patching for vision improvement
Related Conditions
Pediatric Eye Surgery helps diagnose and monitor these conditions. Explore our condition pages for more detailed information about each.
Frequently Asked Questions
At what age can a child undergo eye surgery?
There is no minimum age — the timing is dictated by the condition. Congenital cataracts should be removed within the first few weeks of life to prevent irreversible amblyopia. Squint surgery is typically performed between 6 months and 4 years for infantile esotropia, but can be done at any age. Blocked tear duct probing is often delayed until 12–18 months because many obstructions resolve spontaneously in the first year. Dr. Dibya Prabha assesses each child individually at Neurovision Clinic, Ranchi, and recommends the optimal timing based on the condition's visual impact and the child's developmental stage.
Is general anaesthesia safe for my child's eye surgery?
Pediatric eye surgery requires general anaesthesia because children cannot lie perfectly still during delicate eye surgery. Modern paediatric anaesthesia is very safe when administered by experienced paediatric anaesthesiologists with appropriate monitoring. The anaesthesia team at Neurovision Clinic's affiliated surgical facility conducts a thorough pre-operative assessment, follows standard fasting guidelines, and uses weight-appropriate medications. Parents are encouraged to discuss any concerns — including family history of anaesthesia reactions — during the pre-anaesthetic checkup.
How do I care for my child after eye surgery?
Post-operative care depends on the specific procedure but generally includes: administer prescribed eye drops exactly on schedule (antibiotics, steroids, and sometimes dilating drops), prevent the child from rubbing the eye (elbow splints or mittens may be helpful for infants and toddlers), keep water and soap out of the eyes during bathing, avoid school/playground for 1–2 weeks, and attend all follow-up appointments. For strabismus surgery, mild redness and swelling are normal for 1–2 weeks. For congenital cataract surgery, the child will need diligent follow-up for refractive correction (glasses or contact lenses) and amblyopia therapy (patching). Dr. Dibya Prabha provides a detailed written care plan and her contact number for any post-operative concerns.
How much does pediatric eye surgery cost in Ranchi?
The cost of pediatric eye surgery at Neurovision Clinic, Ranchi varies by the specific procedure — cataract surgery, strabismus surgery, and ptosis repair each have different complexity levels and facility requirements. Dr. Dibya Prabha provides a complete cost estimate during the pre-operative consultation that covers surgeon fees, anaesthesia charges, operating theatre costs, and the post-operative follow-up package. The clinic is committed to making pediatric eye care accessible and affordable for families across Ranchi, all districts of Jharkhand, and neighboring states.